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Property Valuation & Appraisal

Architecture43 CardsCreated 3 months ago

An appraisal is a formal opinion of a property's value as of a specific date. It considers factors like age, location, size, recent sales, replacement cost, and cash equivalency. Market value reflects what a willing buyer and seller would agree upon under normal conditions. Other value types include value in use, assessed value, insured value, investment value, and mortgage value.

An ___ is the opinion or estimate of value of a particular property as of a particular date.

formal appraisal/valuation

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

An ___ is the opinion or estimate of value of a particular property as of a particular date.

formal appraisal/valuation

The price at which a willing buyer and a willing seller would strike a deal given normal market conditions

Market Value

What’s included in a appraisal

In addition to using age, square footage, location, recent sales—all the things agents use— they appraiser also consider the cost to replace the pr...

what a property is worth to the person using it

value in use

what the local taxing authority thinks it’s worth

assessed value

A study of a property that does not necessarily return a price or value

Evaluation

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TermDefinition

An ___ is the opinion or estimate of value of a particular property as of a particular date.

formal appraisal/valuation

The price at which a willing buyer and a willing seller would strike a deal given normal market conditions

Market Value

What’s included in a appraisal

In addition to using age, square footage, location, recent sales—all the things agents use— they appraiser also consider the cost to replace the property. Will also take into consideration cash equivalency

what a property is worth to the person using it

value in use

what the local taxing authority thinks it’s worth

assessed value

A study of a property that does not necessarily return a price or value

Evaluation

Process of forming an opinion of a property’s value

Valuation

The cost of replacing a building in case of a total loss

Insured value

The return of funds invested

Investment value

The price a lender believes the property will bring at a foreclosure sale

Mortgage value

an unbiased estimate or opinion of the market value of real property by a real estate licensee who isn’t a licensed or certified appraiser. It’s usually provided to a seller.

comparative market analysis (CMA)

usually ordered by a lender in a foreclosure situation. They don’t want to shell out the bucks for a full appraisal, so they’ll hire some real estate broker to give them an opinion of price. Basically, it’s just a CMA with a different name for a different purpose. Sometimes a relocation company will ask a broker to do it

broker’s price opinion (BPO)

CMAs vs BPOs

CMAs and BPOs generally rely upon comparable sales, while appraisals may use multiple methods to determine value.

Steps of the valuation process

  1. State the Problem

  2. List the Data Needed and Where to Find It

  3. Gather the Data

  4. Determine the Property’s Highest and Best Use

  5. Estimate the Value of the Land

  6. Estimate Property Value Using Three Approaches to Value

  7. Reconcile the Data

  8. Report the Appraised Value

Types of Data

General Data and Specific data

What’s going on in the national economy, the region, the city, and the neighborhood? Demographics, income level, employers moving in or moving out, employment figures, cost of living, population growing or shrinking,

General Data

The site, positioning on the site, improvements, etc.

Specific Data

three approaches for valuation are:

sales comparison, cost to reproduce, and income and expense approach.

What a buyer has paid for a property and what the seller has accepted

Price

What a property is worth

Value

What it would cost to recreate that property if it disappeared (ie: labor, materials, legal services, zoning, architectural design, financing, taxes

Cost

Two types of costs

Direct costs/hard costs or indirect costs

Labor and materials

Hard/Direct costs

Fees and administrative costs

Indirect costs

Four Significant Factors that Influence Value

Demand
Utility
Scarcity
Transferability

___ is a bit of a popularity contest. How attractive and move-in ready is a property? What’s the market like? Are there more buyers than sellers, or vice versa?

Demand

____ is related to a property’s function. Is it habitable in its current condition? Does it need updating? Repairs? Does the current zoning match the intended use? If a buyer wants a commercial property, but the current zoning is residential, this impacts the value.

Utilit

____ is related to demand. If you’ve studied economics, you know that supply and demand are price drivers. The fewer properties there are on the market (the greater the scarcity), the higher the demand. High demand pushes prices upward.

Scarcity

____ refers to the ease with which the seller can convey the property. Factors such as deed restrictions, clouds on title, or tenants in place can make it more difficult to transfer the property, and thus reduce the property value.

Transferability

Principles of value

Anticipation

Competition

Conformity

Contribution

Highest and Best Use

Plottage

Regression

Progression

Subsititution

The value of property today is the current value of the total anticipated future benefits. For example, a commercial property is leased for $12,000 per year for 30 years. The value of the property is based on the income that is expected to be received in the future.

Anticipation

The more similar properties that are on the market, the lower the price will be driven. ____ is related to supply and demand. The greater the supply (the more competition), the lower the demand (and price). Less competition increases demand and drives pricing upward.

Competition

Value is created and maintained when the characteristics of a property conform to the demands of the market. For example, a house built in the middle of a commercial zone (due to zoning changes) would be valued differently than a house in the middle of a neighborhood made up of similar houses.

onformity

A change in a property impacts the value as a whole. Does converting a garage into a family room contribute to or detract from value? That would be in the eyes of the buyer.

Contribution

This is the most profitable use that is both legal (conforms to zoning) and economically feasible (won't cost more than the increase in value).

Highest and Best Use

The joining or assemblage of two neighboring land parcels increases the property value. In such a case, 1+ 1 often equals 3 or even 5. So two parcels worth $40,000 separately might be worth $120,000 when joined.

Plottage

This is the value a higher-quality property loses by being near a lower-quality property.

Regression

This is the value a lower-quality property gains by being near a higher-quality property. For example, if your neighbor builds on a second story in a quality remodel, the bump in value that your property receives is ____.

Progression

A property’s value is determined by what it would cost to purchase a similar substitute property. If someone offered you a car that is an exact replica of another car but was $3,000 less, it would impact your perceived value of the other car.

Substitution

Cost Approach Calculations

Replacement cost

  • depreciation

  • land value
    = appraised value

Value calculation using income approach

otential gross income

- vacancy collection

= effective gross income

- operating expenses

= net operating income

Then

Net operating income

/ capitalization rate

= value

Capitalization formula

Value = net operating income divided by capitalization rate