The Difference Between a Property Appraisal and a Formal Valuation
A property appraisal conducted by a real estate agent is an informed estimate of the price a property is likely to achieve in the current market. It draws on comparable sales, current buyer demand, and the working knowledge of the agent of the local area. It is not a legally binding document, does not carry the same weight as a certified valuation, and reflects one professional opinion at a point in time.
A vendor who needs a property value for a legal or financial purpose cannot rely on an agent appraisal. They require a formal valuation. The agent appraisal serves a different function - it informs the listing price decision, not the legal record.
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
Selecting an agent based on the highest appraisal figure is one of the most reliably expensive mistakes in residential property sales. It is also one of the most common.
What follows is predictable. The property launches at the inflated price. The first weeks pass without a serious offer. Days on market accumulate. The agent recommends a price reduction. The reduction attracts buyers who have been waiting - and they offer below the reduced price because they know the vendor is now motivated by time, not confidence.
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?
How an agent answers the question about price reduction strategy tells the vendor more about their approach than the appraisal figure itself.
Local Expert Commentary
Property appraisals in the Gawler District and northern Adelaide corridor reflect the same tension found in every residential market - the gap between what a vendor hopes their property is worth and what current comparable sales indicate buyers will pay. Gawler East Real Estate gives residential vendors across the Gawler District an honest assessment of where their property sits in the current market, supported by comparable sales data and direct buyer intelligence from the northern Adelaide corridor.
Property Appraisal - Questions Most Vendors Have Before They List
How many agents should I appraise my property before deciding
Getting appraisals from two or three agents before committing is standard practice. Multiple appraisals give the vendor a reference range, allow comparison of the evidence each agent presents, and reveal differences in approach that a single appraisal conceals. The goal is not the highest figure - it is the most thoroughly supported one.
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.