W_A_Watson_II
Well-known member
Appraisals of homes but next to zero value in an out building. I had a very nice Morton building, fully lined, insulated, power bathroom, etc... and I got less than 10% of the cost in an appraisal.
Your talking about selling, very different than a refinance appraisal in my area.
Ben
Sold my old house this past summer. Realtor added about 20K for the garage. All offers were people interested because of the garage. Around here, it usually works out where it adds about the cost of materials. But like a pool, what it can do is limit buyers.
I think he was saying that a permit for demo and soil disturbance was 40k.
I don't really understand why it would be a minus, please explain that. I mean, I can see that someone may not need the red iron metal building and since they have no need for it they certainly won't pay more because it is there. But I can't understand why they would expect to pay less if it is there. I would think there would be a lot of things someone could do with the building. If nothing else, build some dividers inside the building and charge people to store stuff there.
I just looked mine up because of your thread. Lookup your neighbors house with a detached garage on zillow then click the county auditor link, it should pull up the house on the auditors site, if not you can search it manually.
Accessed values on Zillow, et al, are pulled from county records.
Keep in mind though, an appraisal is just based on what the perceived value is to someone else. Nobody cares how much it cost to build if there isn't market demand for what you have.
It's just like cars - you can buy a 77 Mustang II and spend $50k restoring it, and it's still only worth $15k (or whatever the going rate is for those cars). Or you could have a 69 Boss Mustang that's appraised at $100k. Just because you have X-dollars into something, doesn't mean someone else is going to give you X-dollars back for it (or that it will appraise as such).
Agreed. But in theory, putting money in to restore is different than cost to build. One thing that bugs me about the whole appraisal is this scenario. If you take the same house plans, use the same contractor, and the same supplier to build a house. But you build it in two different areas, the only difference in price should be the cost of the land itself. But that tends to not be the case.
No.
A bad school district will hurt the value of that “identical” house, so will a bad, ie trashy neighborhood, a lot on a main highway, a lot next to a junkyard, or a strip mall.
The cost of labor and materials is only part of what establishes market value.
HOAs are regularly trashed on this site, but they exist to establish and maintain desirable neighborhood values and protect and enhance resale value.
Lol, did you read what you quoted? I'm saying use zillow to get to the county auditors site, in some counties its easier to look up your property on zillow and click the link to your property on the county auditors site, than it is to go to the auditors site and look your property up.
That said, if you want to get an idea of what your property is worth after making an "improvement" what else can you look at without paying someone to come out and asses your property?
^^ This ^^
There are a few things that will add to the value. But as noted above, a good appraiser is also going to take into account what improvements have been made to the 'comps' houses.
Take for example, my house. I'm the 5th 2-story house on the block. I have the only 2-story garage. But, my house did not appraise as much as two of the larger 2-story houses. The garage made no difference. Now, had it not been there, it would have been a deduction.
All you really care about is the appraisal being enough for a good rate. That is all that really matters.
When you go to sell, that shop is only worth something to the guy that wants it.
