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Human/realtor appraisals are often very poor. They will take 3-4 nearby & similar homes and basically add/subtract the differences from the home they are comparing. Then they basically just average the adjusted sale prices. They might add a bit onto that price since prices go up over time.

So this has some obvious issues: * Areas without a ton of very similar houses that have also sold recently will basically have no 'comps' to use. * It's really easy to keep identifying differences (pros/cons) until the adjusted prices equal each other but it's hard to know if all of the meaningful differences have actually been identified. * It gives average homes and average buyers a huge advantage. This model assumes that the housing market is hot but not hot enough that someone will pay 10-15% more for some specific feature. Anything unique to a home/property is only going to be worth a fraction of the time & money it would cost to add. Anything super common (kitchen remodel, finished basement, etc.) can actually add 100% or more of it's cost to the houses value because the buyer is paying with 5x or more leverage so paying a bit extra to have it included. This is also why it's often better to fix a few things as the seller than give a discount on the sale price - the buyer will often pay a premium to get things move-in ready since it doesn't impact their monthly costs significantly.




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