Fred

Why a Pre-sales Appraisal Isn’t a Waste of $400

June 3, 2011 | by Fred (email) |

Selling your home is emotional business. It’s easy to measure your self worth by whether or not you get an offer, and if you do, by the size of that offer. It’s also easy to get tied up in the drama of it all–to stop thinking rationally about your home’s value, and to start focusing instead on emotionally charged aspects of the sale.

A pre-sales appraisal (PSA) can help you cut through the emotion, price the home right, and sell it fast. Based on our own selling experiences, we’re believers in the PSA, especially in a difficult housing market. A PSA will run you between $300-500 depending on the region, but you may be able to get the selling agent to cover the cost. We talk about this towards the end of the article.

To help us explain the reasons for a PSA, here’s a story of a typical home selling experience.

A Pre-sales Appraisal Story

Dave and Sally are two young professionals who are graduating from their first home and planning to start a family. They’ve purchased a brand new home across town. Because they have great credit, the couple was able to get a bridge loan to close on their new home before they sell the old one. They need the equity from their first house to pay off the new loan within 6 months or risk the interest rate going up. The couple listed their old home with a local real estate agent and after a few showings, the comments have started to come in.

“The closets are too small.  The highway is too close and too noisy.  The kitchen is dated.” The agent relays a half dozen comments like these to the couple at an evening meeting.

“What are they talking about? Are these just critical people?” Sally says to the agent.

After all, the couple’s clothes fit in those closets just fine. And no one can hear the highway when the windows are shut. And Sally cooked five Thanksgiving dinners in that kitchen with no problems. Who needs to open the windows anyway? And who’s so picky they can’t handle a little road noise?

After seven or eight prospective buyers come through over the course of four weeks, the couple’s agent says, “We’re not seeing offers. Maybe we’re priced too high. I think we should drop the price $10,000 to get competitive.”

Sally and Dave are no fans of the suggestion. But, they recognize they’ve wasted about a month on the market, and they aren’t getting any bites after eight showings. So they agree to move it down. But only $6,000.

Reason #1 for a PSA: It takes the emotion out of pricing a house. Emotions are powerful and get in the way of rational price setting. This is especially true in down housing markets.

After two weeks with the “Just Reduced” sign hanging out front, the couple finally gets a full price offer. “It’s about time”, Dave says to Sally.

But there’s a hitch. The buyer is using an FHA loan, and the offer includes an appraisal clause. Sally and Dave are concerned, but they accept, thinking to themselves that the house is certain to appraise. After all, they already reduced it $6,000, and the offer was full price. Surely they had priced it right the second time.

After two weeks, the couple gets more bad news from their agent. The house appraised for $10,000 below the offer price due to a few short sales in the area that closed in the past quarter. The agent says that in this neighborhood, in this economic environment, they’re best off taking the revised offer. The buyer can’t afford to bring more money to the closing table, and every buyer in this neighborhood is going to be in the same situation.

Reason #2 for a PSA: If you overprice the house, it’s going to be on the market a lot longer, and you’ll probably have to reduce it anyway.

Sally and Dave consider challenging the appraisal, but their agent advises against it. And rightly so. Unless an appraiser has made a gross oversight, they aren’t going to budge on the number. Appraisal gaming is one of the things that got the housing market to where it is right now, and appraisers are very concerned with delivering an accurate estimate.

The couple accepts the offer and closes the deal. It’s taken twelve weeks to close and they were hoping to have wrapped everything up in just six. They’ve paid $1,000 more in interest for the extra six weeks–a totally sunk cost.

If they had known what to price the house originally, they might have been able to close in just six weeks.

Reason #3 for a PSA: Pricing a house too high leads to holding costs for the seller. Pricing too low leaves money on the table.

Its been four weeks since closing. Dave and Sally love their new home, but for some reason they don’t feel so great about the sale of their prior home. Not only did prospective buyers think their house was worth less than they expected, the bank agreed.

And that gets Sally to thinking, “The agent helped us price the house to begin with. It’s his fault it took so long to make the sale.”

And maybe Sally is right. Maybe it is the agent’s fault. Although this would be unusual. Real estate agents are incentivized to price houses to sell quickly, not necessarily at the best price. (It’s true. Freakonomics explains why.) More than likely, it was an accident. The agent wanted them to feel good about the price, and he didn’t realize how recent foreclosures and short sales had affected the market.

Or maybe Sally and Dave themselves wanted the price set high, because that’s what their neighbors had sold for last year.

Reason #4 for a PSA: Real estate agents aren’t experts at pricing, and they aren’t necessarily objective. Appraisers usually are.

Had Sally and Dave paid up front for a pre-sales appraisal, they could have dealt with the emotional reality of the lower price point before listing the house. They likely would have sold the house more quickly, avoiding the added interest charges associated with holding the property. And they would have saved themselves the headache and heartache of working through the sale. They’d also probably trust their agent after the sale, and wouldn’t be skeptical that the agent had led them wrong.

Considering a PSA? Get Your Agent to Pay

If you’re considering selling your home, we think a pre-sales appraisal makes sense. In fact, if you’re selling a house worth more than $250,000, we think you should require your selling agent to pay for a pre-sales appraisal as a condition of becoming your agent. (Note that if the agent agrees, she will likely require you to pay for the pre-sales appraisal up front and will reimburse you for the cost at closing). If you’re home is worth less, consider asking the agent to pay for half.

(photo credit: neubie)

7 Responses
  1. Great tip Fred! You’re right, emotions do get in the way when it comes time to get an appraisal yourself, but it’s always easy to see when other people should do it. I know it’s a wise thing to do, especially in this market, and at least it gives you a good idea of what to expect from a cool headed expert. Sometimes $400 seem like a little much when you feel like your house should appraise for what you as the homeowner feel like it should, but I know I needed reminding that it is such a wise investment. Thanks!

  2. Beth says:

    Interesting and very timely article! Since our house just appraised way under what the buyer’s purchase price was!

    I think if we had done a PSA we wouldn’t have tried to sell our house this year (since we don’t have to move) — that could be a fear that real estate agents have in this market.

    Also, I emailed with the owner of the comp house that brought our value down and not only did his house have some major work that needed to be done but he got it for $40,000 less than IT appraised for — because it was a short sale. Seems pretty unfair that our kept up & improved home got appraised for $10,000 LESS than his appraisal when the discount he got was probably more related to it being a short sale\waiting so long and missing the new homeowner credit.

    Just some things to think about. I’m glad we went through this process anyway, it will make us smarter for the next go-around. Here’s hoping some regular sales can sell in our neighborhood!

  3. Fred says:

    Beth, great point on why agents might be fearful of getting a PSA—It might make a seller think twice about whether this is the right timing. While I like the agent we use well enough, it’s just a reality that agents work for themselves first, and since people sell homes so infrequently, it’s hard to evaluate an agent’s performance objectively.

    I have an idea on fixing that. Stay tuned for that article.

  4. I have been involved in several realestate dealings and with out a doubt pre sale appraisals are key and in many places are becoming required by the lenders. I have found that up to 3 diff appraisals….. depending on the property may be required pre purchase. I am all for it. Thanks for the great read, Dave

  5. Houston says:

    I am in total agreement here. A PSA can save you a lot of headaches when it comes to trying to sell your house. Of course, if you think the first appraisal was too low you can always get a second opinion. It’s a small price to pay compared to the amount of money you can potentially make from selling your house!

  6. modernhousewife says:

    Does anyone know if you can get an FHA PSA? FHA appraisals last for 6 months — so if we do this next time we try to sell our house, I’d want to get an FHA one I think, so we can be sure that it will stick when we go to sell the house if the buyer uses a FHA loan..

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