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Real Estate
Appraiser
Vital Information
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Start-up Investment
Low - $3000 (for word processor and camera, using the family car)
High - $10,000 (includes an office, car lease, and some advertising)
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Break-even time - Two months to one year
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Estimate of Annual Revenue and Profit
Revenue $70,000 - $3 million (one person at low end; supervision a staff of
appraisers at high end)
Profit (Pre-tax) - $60,000 - $500,000
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Real Estate Detectives
The function of a real estate appraiser is to determine what
a particular piece of property is worth. Clients for this industry can be found
in a number of different areas:
Government: every time the government condemns a property or
reassesses taxes, they will need to know the value of the property.
Attorneys: whether they are distributing an estate or
representing clients in a business partnership break-up or marriage where
couples or partners must divide real estate.
Buyers and/or sellers: before listing or buying a home,
individuals will want to know the value of their property.
Insurance carriers: before making property damage
settlements, insurance carriers will want to know the current value of the
property they are insuring.
Banks: loans are not made or a home foreclosed on without the
value of the property being established.
Appraisers can either specialize in one of the above or just
handle residential or commercial properties, but many larger companies cover all
the bases. Not all areas of real estate are moving at the same pace at the same
time. If an appraiser is able to handle a cross-section of the market, he can
stay busy dealing with residential when commercial is soft and vice versa.
Method to the Madness
Real estate appraisers don't just look over a property and
make a well educated guess when evaluating the worth of a particular property.
Appraisers are required by the two professional societies that represent the
industry -- the Society of Real Estate Appraisers and the American Institute of
Real Estate Appraisers -- to apply the following approaches;
Cost Approach: First you ascertain all the separate parts of
a property -- what was originally paid for the property and the structure (s) on
the property. You're not looking for construction flaws so you don't need to be
an engineer, but you do have to have a basic knowledge of construction. Then you
need to establish what the construction costs would be if you were building
today. Then you deduct the depreciation on the existing property since its
purchase and construction. The end result: the cost of the property.
Market Data Approach: Comparing sales in the same community
that compare with the property you are appraising. You must add any appreciation
or deduct any depreciation and adjust for differences such as size or upgrades.
Income Approach: This approach assumes that the owner might
wish to retain the property and garner income by renting it out. You would need
to compare the rentals charged for similar commercial or residential structures
in the same community and calculate what your client may make as a net income
prior to mortgage payments.
Appraisers are expected to use all three approaches to arrive
at the fair market value of the property they are appraising, unless there are
no income-producing properties in the same area.
Determining the value of a property involves a great deal
more effort than just going to the courthouse and finding out what similar
property has recently sold for. It is necessary to determine the reasons a
property sold for what it sold for.. An appraiser needs to look beyond the
bottom line on the deed. Perhaps the negotiations stretched over a long period
of time -- the deed (and agreed upon price) could be dated a year or two earlier
than it was actually finalized. Perhaps a seller was in a bind and sold below
market because he/she was making an overnight move. All of these factors must be
examined when determining the property's value.
Here's where you really have to make like Sherlock Holmes.
You will have to dig up clues through your detective work -- talk to the buyer
and seller or the attorneys and real estate brokers involved in the sale. A good
deal of an appraiser's fees are predicated upon their good judgment and their
ability to get to the bottom of a real estate deal and find accurate and
meaningful numbers.
You can really capitalize on your leg work if you are able to
appraise more than one similar property within a reasonable time period. Most
lenders require residential property comparisons no more than 6 months apart
although commercial properties may stay current for a much longer period of
time.
Nuts and Bolts
Few appraisers charge strictly by the hour. The type of
appraisal required varies dramatically from client to client. For example, a
bank may supply much of the back-up information and provide a form for you to
fill in, thus cutting down greatly on the amount of time required to make the
assessment. On the other hand, a homeowner may want a written report which
requires more extensive research and a lot more time. Typically appraisers for
commercial real estate take much longer than for residential properties. So when
structuring your fee schedule, you will have to consider all of the above
factors and many more.
Most successful appraisal firms fall under two categories:
solo appraisers with no overhead and large firms with 15 to 30 employees. The
in-between firms have problems meeting their overhead because they need the same
data as a large firm and are not generating the income to meet the expenses.
A solo operator can easily run his/her office from a spare
room in his/her home and needs to have a minimum of equipment: a telephone, tape
measure and camera. You can use your own car to travel from property to
property, and if you can type, buy a typewriter (or preferably a word
processor). You will also need to advertise, perhaps in professional banking or
law journals or in the Yellow Pages.
To grow -- Yes or No?
Adding a partner will probably also mean adding office space
and a full-time secretary. These two additions to your overhead can equate to
50% of your fees. And in supplies, car insurance, and taxes such as Social
Security, and you're adding anywhere from 0% to 25% more your fees.
Marketing will become more and more crucial as you grow
because you will want to grow as fast as you can in order to keep fees
increasing at the same rate as your overhead. As mentioned before, medium-sized
firms are not cost effective because three appraisers need as much data as 100
appraisers.
Networking will also help increase your deducting skills. If
you have strong real estate contacts you may be able to go through their files
instead of wading through stacks of information at the courthouse. A number of
real estate appraisal firms join real estate organizations which provide updated
sales prices and descriptions of properties.
Another area which can become income producing is real estate
brokering. Some appraisers consider this a conflict of interest but there is no
law against putting some of your profits into investments or development of
properties. If you're a skillful detective and have confidence in your own
abilities, who would know a good deal better than you?
Resources
Industrial Associations
American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, 430 N Michigan Ave.,Chicago, IL
60611 (312) 329-8559
Society of Real estate Appraisers, 645 N Michigan
Ave.,Chicago, IL 60611 (312) 346-7422
American Association of Certified Appraisers, 7E. Swin
Dr.,Cincinnati, OH 45218 (513) 825-1603
For additional information helpful in setting up your new
business, taxes, insurance, and much more refer to the
Business Start-Up Fact Finder Manual
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