What Agents Mean When They Offer a Property Appraisal
When a real estate agent offers a property appraisal, they are providing an opinion of likely sale price based on the evidence available to them. That evidence typically includes recent comparable sales, current listing activity, and direct knowledge of buyer behaviour in the relevant price range. The appraisal is a starting point for a conversation, not a contractual figure.
A statutory property valuation, by contrast, is a formal document prepared by a certified practising valuer. It carries legal standing and is used for mortgage lending, legal settlements, estate administration, and capital gains tax calculations. It follows a regulated methodology and produces a figure that can be defended in court or before a lender.
What each document is used for:
- Agent appraisal: informing the listing price, deciding whether to sell, comparing agent assessments
- Statutory valuation: mortgage lending, legal settlement, estate administration, capital gains tax, insurance replacement value
What the Highest Appraisal Actually Tells You About the Agent Who Gave It
The psychology behind it is straightforward. A vendor has an emotional attachment to their home and a figure in mind that feels right. The agent who validates that figure wins the listing. The agent who presents a more conservative, evidence-based assessment loses it.
The pattern has a name in real estate circles. It is called buying the listing. The cost is borne entirely by the vendor.
This is not a theoretical risk. Research by CoreLogic has consistently shown that properties requiring price reductions after launch achieve lower final prices than comparable properties that sold within their original price range - and take significantly longer to do so.
Getting More From a Property Appraisal - What to Ask and Why
Most vendors receive a property appraisal as a single number or a narrow range. Few ask how that number was arrived at. The reasoning behind the figure is more valuable than the figure itself - because it tells the vendor whether the assessment is grounded in current evidence or in optimism.
Questions that produce genuinely useful information from a property appraisal:
- Which specific properties did you use as comparables, and what did they sell for?
- How long did those comparable properties take to sell?
- What is your current days on market average for properties in this price range?
- Are there active buyers on your database currently looking for a property like this?
- What would you recommend doing before listing to improve the result?
- If the property does not sell within the first four weeks, what is your recommended response?
The last question is particularly revealing. An agent who has a clear, evidence-based answer to that question has thought through the campaign beyond the listing appointment. An agent who has not considered it has not thought past winning the listing.
Local Expert Commentary
The value of a property appraisal in any market comes from the local knowledge behind it - the comparable sales, the active buyer intelligence, and the honest assessment of where a specific property sits relative to current competition. Gawler District property specialists reflects the kind of local market knowledge that separates a useful appraisal from an aspirational one - built on recent comparable sales across the Gawler District and an understanding of the buyer pool currently active in the northern Adelaide corridor.
What Homeowners Ask About the Property Appraisal Process
Should I request appraisals from multiple agents
Two to three appraisals is the practical standard. More produces diminishing returns. The value is not in averaging numbers but in assessing the quality of reasoning each agent brings.
Can an agent change their appraisal after I sign with them
There is no formal recourse for an appraisal that proves optimistic, provided the agent did not misrepresent the market deliberately. This is why vendors benefit from requesting the comparable sales evidence upfront - it creates a shared understanding of the basis for the appraisal and makes any subsequent market feedback easier to interpret.
What is involved in a thorough property appraisal
During the walkthrough, an experienced agent is assessing the property against the comparable sales they have in mind. They are noting the things that buyers will notice - light, condition, storage, street appeal, any deferred maintenance - and calibrating how the property compares to the alternatives available at the same price level. Presenting the property honestly, including flagging any known issues, produces a more reliable appraisal than presenting it in an artificially improved state.