In this article David Airey discusses important tips to consider to evaluate the value of your property.
When it comes to judging a property to get a reasonable indication of
its value and probable sale price there are three options you might
consider.
First, a real estate agent can give an appraisal which is largely an
educated guess based on their current sales experience and local
knowledge. This is informal but usually pretty helpful as an indication.
Second, an owner or buyer can hire a professional valuer to produce a
more formal and authoritative report. These reports are based on sales
information held at Landgate and
from information obtained from real estate agents on recent sales not
yet reflected in the government data. Usually these are the reports
which banks and legal bodies will accept as valid for lending and legal
purposes.
A professional valuation removes any perception that there might be a
bias on the part of real estate agent appraising a property and is
regarded as more independent.
Thirdly, the option to pay for a property report from one of the many
private companies which are not valuers. However, people thinking of
doing this should be aware there can be limitations to this.
Most of the companies which provide this service are based on the east coast of Australia and have few or no staff here.
This means that the reports are largely put together based on
Landgate data showing the last sale price and then calibrated to place
the property in the context of the current market.
While that might sound quite reasonable, such reports can only be
based on the unimproved value of the property since its last
transaction.
For example, if a property was purchased in 2005 and the owner
demolished the old house and built a bigger one in its place, then this
would not be known by a property group based in Sydney or Melbourne.
They would only know of the 2005 sale price, even though the site now
has a completely different value. It’s a similar situation if an owner
puts in a pool, adds a second story or patio, or maybe constructs a
lock-up garage.
These things are not readily detectable through an arms-length report
based on data rather than being produced by actually sighting the
property and being familiar with its history.
If you solicit a property report from a company that deals in real
estate data, make sure it can measure the current improved value of the
property and not rely simply on historical sales information.
Better still, engage a local valuer if you need a formal, legal
valuation or contact a REIWA agent for an appraisal if that’s all you
require.
Either way, it pays to use the local services of those who know your neighbourhood.
David Airey is president of the Real Estate Institute of Western Australia. This article was originally published on reiwa.com.
Article Source: http://www.propertyobserver.com.au/residential/what-is-the-best-way-to-judge-the-value-of-your-property-david-airey/2013072863556?utm_source=po&utm_medium=aida&utm_campaign=ourobservers:adviceandanalysisforreaders
No comments:
Post a Comment