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Understanding Your Home Appraisal

An appraisal protects you and your lender from overpaying. Here is everything you need to know — what appraisers evaluate, what happens when the value comes in low, and how to prepare.

Understanding Your Home Appraisal

$300-$600

Typical appraisal cost

1-2 weeks

Average turnaround time

~35%

Of buyers face appraisal issues

3-6 comps

Used to determine value

What Is a Home Appraisal and Why Does It Matter?

A home appraisal is an independent, professional opinion of a property's market value, performed by a state-licensed or certified appraiser. The appraisal is ordered by the lender — not by the buyer or seller — to ensure the property is worth the amount being financed. This protects both the lender (who does not want to loan more than the home is worth) and the buyer (who does not want to overpay).

Who orders it?

The lender orders the appraisal through an appraisal management company (AMC). Since 2009, the Home Valuation Code of Conduct (now part of Dodd-Frank) requires separation between the loan officer and appraiser selection.

Who pays?

The buyer pays the appraisal fee, typically $300-$600 for a single-family home. Complex, rural, or high-value properties may cost more. The fee is usually collected upfront or at closing.

How long does it take?

The appraiser typically visits the property for 30-60 minutes. The full report takes 1-2 weeks to complete, depending on market conditions and appraiser availability.

What Appraisers Evaluate

Click any area below for a detailed breakdown of what the appraiser examines and how it affects your home's value.

Location & Neighborhood Comps

Proximity to schools, amenities, employment centers, and comparable neighborhood sales.

Home Size, Layout & Condition

Gross living area, bedroom/bathroom count, floor plan functionality, and overall condition.

Recent Comparable Sales

Three to six comparable sales from the past 3-6 months drive the final value opinion.

Needed Repairs or Updates

Health, safety, and structural deficiencies that must be addressed for financing approval.

Lot Size & Site Features

Lot dimensions, topography, view, landscaping, and external improvements.

What Happens When the Appraisal Comes In Low

A low appraisal means the appraiser's opinion of value is less than the agreed-upon purchase price. This is one of the most stressful situations in a real estate transaction. The lender will only finance a loan based on the appraised value — not the contract price. If the appraisal is $15,000 below the purchase price, someone has to cover that $15,000 gap. Here are your five options:

1

Renegotiate the Price

Ask the seller to lower the sale price to match the appraised value.

2

Bring Extra Cash to Close

Cover the difference between the appraised value and the purchase price out of pocket.

3

Request a Reconsideration of Value (ROV)

Ask your lender to have the appraiser reconsider using additional comparable sales or correcting errors.

4

Walk Away Using the Appraisal Contingency

Exercise your contractual right to cancel the purchase and get your earnest money back.

5

Get a Second Appraisal

Order a new appraisal from a different appraiser through your lender or by switching lenders.

Appraisal vs. Inspection vs. CMA

These three evaluations serve different purposes. Understanding the difference prevents confusion about what each professional is responsible for.

AppraisalHome InspectionCMA
PurposeDetermine market value for the lenderIdentify physical defects and safety issuesEstimate listing or offer price
Ordered byLender (paid by buyer)BuyerReal estate agent
Performed byLicensed or certified appraiserLicensed home inspectorReal estate agent (not licensed appraiser)
Cost$300-$600$300-$500Free (included with agent services)
Required for financing?Yes (for most mortgage types)No (but strongly recommended)No
Focuses onMarket value based on comparable sales, location, conditionPhysical condition — roof, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, structurePrice positioning relative to active and sold listings
ResultWritten appraisal report with a single value opinionDetailed report of defects, photos, and recommendationsSuggested price range for listing or offering
Legally binding?Affects loan amount lender will approveNo — advisory only, buyer decides how to proceedNo — advisory only

Appraisal Gap Coverage

What Is an Appraisal Gap?

An appraisal gap is the difference between the appraised value and the purchase price when the appraisal comes in lower than the contract price. For example, if you agreed to pay $400,000 but the appraisal comes in at $385,000, the appraisal gap is $15,000.

What Is Appraisal Gap Coverage?

Appraisal gap coverage (also called an appraisal gap guarantee) is a clause in your purchase offer where you agree in advance to cover some or all of the difference between the appraised value and the purchase price — using your own funds. This is common in competitive markets where buyers want to make their offer more attractive to sellers.

How it works

You write into your offer: "Buyer will cover an appraisal gap of up to $20,000." If the appraisal comes in $15,000 low, you bring that $15,000 in additional cash to closing. If the gap exceeds your coverage amount, you can renegotiate or exercise your appraisal contingency.

Important considerations

Appraisal gap coverage funds come from your cash reserves and are separate from your down payment. Your lender will verify you have sufficient funds for both. Do not commit to more gap coverage than you can afford — factor it into your total cash-to-close calculation before making an offer.

Tips for a Smooth Appraisal

While the buyer has limited control over the appraisal outcome, the seller (and listing agent) can take steps to help ensure the appraiser has the information needed to support the property's value.

Clean and Declutter

A clean, well-maintained home makes a strong first impression. While appraisers are trained to look past clutter, excessive mess can suggest deferred maintenance and may make it harder for the appraiser to evaluate condition accurately.

Source: Appraisal Institute best practices

Provide a List of Upgrades with Receipts

Give the appraiser a written list of all improvements, renovations, and upgrades — with dates and costs. New roof, kitchen remodel, HVAC replacement, windows, flooring — anything that adds value. Appraisers cannot account for improvements they do not know about.

Source: Fannie Mae Selling Guide

Do Not Be Present During the Appraisal

The appraiser needs to work independently and without pressure. Being present can make the appraiser uncomfortable or create the appearance of bias. Let your agent handle access and leave the improvement list for the appraiser to review.

Source: Appraisal Institute Code of Professional Ethics

Ensure Clear Access to All Areas

The appraiser needs access to the attic, crawl space, basement, garage, all rooms, and the full exterior of the property. Locked gates, blocked crawl spaces, or inaccessible attics may result in an incomplete appraisal or the need for a return visit (additional cost and delay).

Source: HUD Handbook 4000.1

Complete Minor Repairs Before the Appraisal

Fix leaking faucets, patch holes in walls, replace broken window panes, and address peeling paint. For FHA and VA loans, health and safety items must be repaired before closing — completing them before the appraisal prevents the report from being marked "subject to" repairs.

Source: HUD / VA minimum property requirements

Verify Your Property Information Is Accurate

Check that public records (county assessor) show the correct square footage, bedroom count, bathroom count, and lot size. Errors in public records can lead to inaccurate comps. If your property records are wrong, provide documentation to your agent who can share it with the appraiser.

Source: CFPB homebuyer guidance

Sources: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Fannie Mae Selling Guide (B4-1 Appraisal Requirements), Appraisal Institute — The Appraisal of Real Estate (15th ed.), HUD Handbook 4000.1 (FHA appraisal requirements), VA Pamphlet 26-7 (VA appraisal requirements). Appraisal cost and timeline figures reflect 2024-2025 national averages.

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