Appraisal Service Anywhere In The United States
Is it Form vs.
Confusion or Form vs. Function?
By Charlie W. Elliott, Jr., MAI, SRA
Most of us having been in
the appraisal profession for a few years can remember when the lending
industry required only a couple or three “old stand by” appraisal
products or formats. These included the following:
Fannie Mae Form: The number on this depended upon the year.
Drive By Form: This was considered less than an appraisal by many.
Commercial Narrative Format: This thick and expensive complete appraisal
was usually prepared by an MAI.
That was about it, at a time when there was less confusion and when
function without question dictated form. To make it simpler the
commercial people did not do either of the residential form appraisals.
The designated residential appraisals in many cases considered it below
their dignity to do a drive by so they only did one type of appraisal.
That leaves the drive by, which was usually for sub prime loans to the
least experienced appraiser. That’s because the lender did not pay as
much as for the Fanny Mae form, and the less experienced appraiser was
at the bottom of the pecking order. Given the above, most appraisers
only had to deal with one appraisal format most of the time.
To quote our old friend Yogi Berra, “You can observe a lot by just
watching.” If you haven’t been watching, things have changed lately.
Today, the appraisal profession has become one of specialties. There
seems to be a form for almost everything thing one can think of. A
recent survey of appraisal company service menus showed many companies
have 20, 30, and even 40 and more different products to offer.
Why on earth do we need so many more appraisal formats than we did in
the past? There are likely varying opinions on this. Since I am the
author, I will take the liberty to venture the following answer to this
question.
Everything is more complicated today. As reported of the military, the
real estate industry has forms for everything including one for
completing a trip to the necessary room. Perhaps this only represents a
maturing of an industry, which in its earlier years relied more on
one-size-fits-all loans. There is fierce competition between lending
companies for loans, causing lenders to look for new and better ways to
curry favor from borrowers, thus sometimes requiring different appraisal
formats. Government regulations dictate additional forms for the
appraisal of different types of property while the credit scoring of the
borrower can determine what type of appraisal form is required. The
industry in one breath moves to reduce the cost and time required to
produce an appraisal by allowing drive by limited appraisals, and in
another requires FHA addendums requiring five additional pages of
paperwork. There are desktop appraisal review forms, field review
appraisal forms and convertible desk top/field review appraisal forms.
This does not begin to address the many “near appraisal formats” such as
BPO forms or broker price opinion forms and AVM formats or automated
valuation models. The savings-and-loan debacle of the ‘80s generated an
outcry for all appraisers to become state certified which has become a
reality. Now that we have in excess of 80,000 state-certified
appraisers, many lenders when possible are opting for the use of BPOs
and AVMs, which may be completed by, and in some cases, are required to
be completed, by people without appraisal certifications.
Does all of this make any sense? Probably not, or at least in a macro
sense. But in much the same way as we see our health care and
educational systems change we are seeing it in our industry. Remember
the old saying, “Whatever goes around comes around”? If our educational
system complains about poorly educated students, low paid teachers and
poor test scores one day and strict policies, high education cost and
too much testing the next, is this progress? Is having a multitude of
appraisal forms for all of the above reasons any different? Perhaps in
our society, all of this hemming and hawing is the price we must pay to
represent the interest of all concerned and still get the job done. In
the midst of all of this confusion, one has to wonder whether people
ordering appraisals are aware of the many choices that are available and
when which form is appropriate for which task. In an attempt to address
this question listed below are a few of the typical appraisal forms
which we as appraisers find most practical for the general and everyday
needs of the lender and a brief description of its use.
-
FNMA 1004 (Uniform
Residential Appraisal Report or Fannie Mae Standard Form): This form is
considered the most complete and thorough format for producing a single
family appraisal short of preparing a narrative appraisal which is cost
and time prohibitive for most lending needs. It is usually prepared with
complete interior inspection and subject as well as comparable
photographs.
-
FNMA 1073 (Individual
Condominium / Planned Unit Development Form): Condominiums and
townhouses are usually appraised on this form. It is usually prepared
with complete interior inspection and subject as well as comparable
photographs.
-
FNMA 1025 (Small Residential
Income Property Report): This is for small multifamily one-to-four unit,
and sometimes larger, residential-income-producing properties are
usually appraised on this form. It is usually prepared with complete
interior inspection and subject as well as comparable photographs.
-
FNMA 2055 (Quantitative
Analysis Report or Limited Drive By Report): This is a limited appraisal
report usually performed by exterior inspection only. It should contain
subject and may contain comparable photographs. It is usually used when
costs and time constraints are an issue.
-
FNMA 2075 (Exterior Property
Inspection Report): This is a property inspection not an appraisal form.
It is not designed to provide a value, however, it does contain a
description of the property and should contain subject photographs. It
is usually used when costs and time constraints are an issue and when a
value is not required.
-
FNMA 2006 (Desk Review/Field
Review Combination): This form can be used for a desk review or a field
review of a previously prepared appraisal. It may be converted from a
desk review to a field review if it is determined that the appraisal is
flawed and if a value is required of the reviewer.
-
Generic “Land -Vacant Land”
Form: This form is used to appraise most any type of vacant land. It can
be used for small lots or large acreage, and residential or commercial
applications, when only the sales comparison approach is required. It is
used primarily when time and cost constraints are an issue.
While the above does not
represent nearly the entire plethora of appraisal forms available today,
it is presented in an effort to simplify the process for most appraisal
orders. In keeping with the theory “wherever possible form should be
dictated by function as opposed to confusion” some may find it a helpful
reference.
Charlie W. Elliott, Jr., MAI, SRA, is
President of ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers, a national real estate
appraisal company. He can be reached at (800) 854-5889 or at
charlie@elliottco.com or through the company’s Web site at
www.appraisalsanywhere.com.
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