Buying A House... Appraisal... How Long Does It Take To Hear Back?

AKL_Megs

DIS Veteran
Joined
Jul 26, 2006
Messages
6,037
We are in the final stages of buying our first house, and we are so excited and anxious. :yay:

The bank sent out an appraiser to look at the house yesterday. He told us that he had to send the information back to the bank, along with information on comparable houses for sale in the area.

My question is, how long will it take to hear from the bank that the house was (or wasn't :scared:) appraised for an acceptable amount? :confused3

We are going CRAZY over here!!!
 
We are in the final stages of buying our first house, and we are so excited and anxious. :yay:

The bank sent out an appraiser to look at the house yesterday. He told us that he had to send the information back to the bank, along with information on comparable houses for sale in the area.

My question is, how long will it take to hear from the bank that the house was (or wasn't :scared:) appraised for an acceptable amount? :confused3

We are going CRAZY over here!!!

Well it could be anywhere from 1 week to a month depending on the appraiser and how quick he really gets it to the bank.
 
We have always heard back within a week but usually just a few days after the appraisal was done.
 
We just bought our first home in June of this year. The appraisal took about a week to get back.

It was the quickest part for us. We started with Wachovia with our loan, but they switched to Wells Fargo (bought out or such) which reset our loan process.

Took us 5 months to get clear to close!! And we had 20% down, fixed loan, nothing crazy with our end. Just took that long.

Wish you luck and do not forget that you can amend THIS year's tax return to get the 8k refund right away.

My wife is an accountant and does taxes. We had ours amended and refund in hand in 5 weeks from close date.. So don't wait!

If you need more info on what forms just pm or ask here and she can post after work.
 
We just did this and our appraisal came back in 3 days I think. And it was low, 10K under, so we proceeded to freak out a little. If yours comes back low, definitely examine the comps they used and talk to your realtor about it. Our realtor wasn't happy with 2 out of the 3 that were used. She sent him 3 more, and he did agree to consider them and ended up coming up some so it was only $3400 under. This was okay with us because, we had tried to roll our closing costs into the loan so we could preserve cash to buy appliances/furniture. The appraisal covered what we consider the price of the house, so that extra $3400 we have to pay up front is essentially closing costs.

Both our realtor and mortgage broker said that what is happening is that as people are trying to get done before the tax credit expires and with the dropping mortgage rates, there is a bump in prices, especially with "turn-key" properties, which ours is. But the comps that are being used are from just before the bump started. If we were buying in a month, then the bump would be visible in the comp sales and it wouldn't have been a problem. And the comps that our realtor sent over were for properties that had just closed.

We had a long closing (60 days) because the sellers were trying to find another place, and we have a lease. We are still 3 weeks away, but we had notice last week that the underwriter had approved the loan, so we're bouncing off the walls now with anticipation.
 
We are in the final stages of buying our first house, and we are so excited and anxious. :yay:

The bank sent out an appraiser to look at the house yesterday. He told us that he had to send the information back to the bank, along with information on comparable houses for sale in the area.

My question is, how long will it take to hear from the bank that the house was (or wasn't :scared:) appraised for an acceptable amount? :confused3

We are going CRAZY over here!!!

Congrats!!!:woohoo:

Now do you have reason to worry that it won't appraise out?

When we were house shopping last yr. we did not even consider buying some homes because we knew they would not appraise out.
People were upside down on their loans.

It should only take a week.:thumbsup2
 
We just did this and our appraisal came back in 3 days I think. And it was low, 10K under, so we proceeded to freak out a little. If yours comes back low, definitely examine the comps they used and talk to your realtor about it. Our realtor wasn't happy with 2 out of the 3 that were used. She sent him 3 more, and he did agree to consider them and ended up coming up some so it was only $3400 under. This was okay with us because, we had tried to roll our closing costs into the loan so we could preserve cash to buy appliances/furniture. The appraisal covered what we consider the price of the house, so that extra $3400 we have to pay up front is essentially closing costs.

Both our realtor and mortgage broker said that what is happening is that as people are trying to get done before the tax credit expires and with the dropping mortgage rates, there is a bump in prices, especially with "turn-key" properties, which ours is. But the comps that are being used are from just before the bump started. If we were buying in a month, then the bump would be visible in the comp sales and it wouldn't have been a problem. And the comps that our realtor sent over were for properties that had just closed.

We had a long closing (60 days) because the sellers were trying to find another place, and we have a lease. We are still 3 weeks away, but we had notice last week that the underwriter had approved the loan, so we're bouncing off the walls now with anticipation.

Why would you want your appraisal to come in higher when you are buying a house? If your appraisal came in $10,000 lower, buy the house for $10,000 less. We always write into the purchase agreement that we will pay xxx or the appraised price, which ever is lower. We have been in situations where appraisals have come back significantly lower and this takes care of the issue.
 
Why would you want your appraisal to come in higher when you are buying a house? If your appraisal came in $10,000 lower, buy the house for $10,000 less. We always write into the purchase agreement that we will pay xxx or the appraised price, which ever is lower. We have been in situations where appraisals have come back significantly lower and this takes care of the issue.

The problem golfgal is that the homeowner will not part with the home for 10,000 less. That is something that is out of the ordinary, esp. with the housing prices dropping. People are upsidedown and cannot afford to take the hit.

And you want the appraisal higher so you can get the loan for the house.

When we bought this house last yr. having the appraisal pretty high vs purchase was a big factor in getting the rate/loan.
 
The problem golfgal is that the homeowner will not part with the home for 10,000 less. That is something that is out of the ordinary, esp. with the housing prices dropping. People are upsidedown and cannot afford to take the hit.

And you want the appraisal higher so you can get the loan for the house.

When we bought this house last yr. having the appraisal pretty high vs purchase was a big factor in getting the rate/loan.

This is why so many people are upside down-at least in our area. For a while houses were selling for a LOT over asking, some $100,000 over. Now people are trying to get out of those houses what they put into them and they were never worth that to begin with. If the seller won't part with the house that appraises at $10,000 WHY ON EARTH would you buy the house for more then it is worth? Sorry, it just doesn't make economic sense to pay more for a house then it is worth. If you buy a house for more then appraised, REAL appraised cost, you are starting out upside down. If a house came in at $10,000 under agreed price either the seller lowers the price or the buyer should walk away.
 
This is why so many people are upside down-at least in our area. For a while houses were selling for a LOT over asking, some $100,000 over. Now people are trying to get out of those houses what they put into them and they were never worth that to begin with. If the seller won't part with the house that appraises at $10,000 WHY ON EARTH would you buy the house for more then it is worth? Sorry, it just doesn't make economic sense to pay more for a house then it is worth. If you buy a house for more then appraised, REAL appraised cost, you are starting out upside down. If a house came in at $10,000 under agreed price either the seller lowers the price or the buyer should walk away.

If you happen to be in an area that is experiencing a "sellers" market you may have to pay more than the appraised cost to buy house. During the past housing boom, many times there were bidding wars on houses where the actual purchase price was well over the original listing price. All those buyers were betting that the house price would appreciate over time due to the market conditions. Unfortunately that wasn't the case for most.
 
If you happen to be in an area that is experiencing a "sellers" market you may have to pay more than the appraised cost to buy house. During the past housing boom, many times there were bidding wars on houses where the actual purchase price was well over the original listing price. All those buyers were betting that the house price would appreciate over time due to the market conditions. Unfortunately that wasn't the case for most.

So.....

Again, it makes ZERO sense to buy a house for more then it is worth-in ANY market. It is just financially foolish, as people are finding out now.
 
This is why so many people are upside down-at least in our area. For a while houses were selling for a LOT over asking, some $100,000 over. Now people are trying to get out of those houses what they put into them and they were never worth that to begin with. If the seller won't part with the house that appraises at $10,000 WHY ON EARTH would you buy the house for more then it is worth? Sorry, it just doesn't make economic sense to pay more for a house then it is worth. If you buy a house for more then appraised, REAL appraised cost, you are starting out upside down. If a house came in at $10,000 under agreed price either the seller lowers the price or the buyer should walk away.

Same here but sellers actually wanted you to put up cash to cover their debt and plus they were giving you a house that needed about 40,000 worth of work.:sad2:

Alot of the people were out of work for a long while and then took out home equity loans/second mortgages based on before the bottom dropping out appraisals.

It took us 8 months to find a house last yr. So all this "buyers paradise" is nonsense. Granted we were looking in a specific area which made it difficult.

A good home with a sane price is snatched within days in my area.
 
So.....

Again, it makes ZERO sense to buy a house for more then it is worth-in ANY market. It is just financially foolish, as people are finding out now.

Oh I know it makes absolutely no sense financially. That's part of why our economy is in the mess that it is.
 
This is why so many people are upside down-at least in our area. For a while houses were selling for a LOT over asking, some $100,000 over. Now people are trying to get out of those houses what they put into them and they were never worth that to begin with. If the seller won't part with the house that appraises at $10,000 WHY ON EARTH would you buy the house for more then it is worth? Sorry, it just doesn't make economic sense to pay more for a house then it is worth. If you buy a house for more then appraised, REAL appraised cost, you are starting out upside down. If a house came in at $10,000 under agreed price either the seller lowers the price or the buyer should walk away.

You are assuming that an appraiser has the ability to determine the exact "worth" of the house. They are merely giving an opinion (their opinion) of the fair market value of the property as of a specific date. Give three appraisers the same task and they are likely to offer three different opinions. The contract price is sometimes the best indicator of the value of the property - after all, that is what someone is willing to pay. Three years ago appraisers were doing their best to justify rapidly increasing values. Now, they are doing their best to lower the bar.

If it is a property that I liked, I would certainly want the appraiser to justify the purchase price if their findings put the value within $10,000. However, if they were $25,000 or more off on a small residential property I certainly would not go forward with the purchase.

OP - the underwriting process can be fairly lengthy these days. Would not be surprised if you waited more than 30 days. Much depends on the lender. The theory these days is that lenders will do most anything not to lend money - even to those who are cleary qualified.
 
You are assuming that an appraiser has the ability to determine the exact "worth" of the house. They are merely giving an opinion (their opinion) of the fair market value of the property as of a specific date. Give three appraisers the same task and they are likely to offer three different opinions. The contract price is sometimes the best indicator of the value of the property - after all, that is what someone is willing to pay. Three years ago appraisers were doing their best to justify rapidly increasing values. Now, they are doing their best to lower the bar.

If it is a property that I liked, I would certainly want the appraiser to justify the purchase price if their findings put the value within $10,000. However, if they were $25,000 or more off on a small residential property I certainly would not go forward with the purchase.

OP - the underwriting process can be fairly lengthy these days. Would not be surprised if you waited more than 30 days. Much depends on the lender. The theory these days is that lenders will do most anything not to lend money - even to those who are cleary qualified.


Actually the Fair Market Value of a house is the amount which a buyer is willing to pay a seller in an arms length transaction. So the value of the house is determined at contract. The appraisal is simply documentation for that bank that the loan is reasonable. So yes, three appraisers would come up with three different values most likely.
 
The down payment should also get the loan amount under the appraised value.

OP, we have gotten a verbal within days, usually, and the full appraisal a week or so later. Be sure to get the physical copy - it's yours, you paid for it.
 
Why would you want your appraisal to come in higher when you are buying a house? If your appraisal came in $10,000 lower, buy the house for $10,000 less. We always write into the purchase agreement that we will pay xxx or the appraised price, which ever is lower. We have been in situations where appraisals have come back significantly lower and this takes care of the issue.

After we went under contract, our realtor got the impression that the sellers were feeling "seller's remorse." If we went back to renegotiate the price, our realtor, who is not only a close friend, but in the business for over 20 years felt that they would prefer the contract to fall apart at that point. They aren't in a forced move for job, they aren't underwater, or anything like that. They are having to move into a rental because they can't find a house they like.

And our realtor had legitimate concerns with the comps the appraiser used. The house we are buying is on a cul-de-sac in the middle of a subdivision, and 2 of the comps that were used were for houses backing onto a major 4 lane road. The area where we are buying has had limited sales in the period the appraiser could look at. The house is on a lot that is significantly larger than anything that has sold, and there were questions about if the adjustment to account for that was adequate. Two additional properties closed after his initial pull. We asked him to consider those. It was after that, that he adjusted his appraisal up $6K. Which brought the appraised value to more than the list price of the house. The difference was our closing costs we rolled into the loan. We had wanted to preserve cash, although it's probably better that we are just paying them up front anyway.

Aside from those reasons, after looking at dozens of houses, this house was by far in the best condition than anything else we had considered. The other houses, would have come with major cosmetic updates (kitchen, baths, carpets). This house had the proper permits filed with the city for the basement renovation and deck, and the inspector could tell from what he could see it was a high quality professional job. It's a 40 year old house and the inspector could not come up with anything of concern, and called it a "gem of a house." The appraiser isn't looking at those things. Given a choice between having to come up with an extra $4K in cash because of a low appraisal, and knowing that we aren't going to have to sink money into replacing carpets, stripping wallpaper, replacing circa 72 kitchen cabinets and appliances, and harvest gold sinks and tubs in a house that appraised out...well, you can see which one we chose.

If the difference had been greater, certainly things would have been different. If we knew the seller had to sell, and it would be difficult for them to find another buyer (we were under contract about 36 hours after the house was listed and they had multiple offers), that would have made a difference in negotiating.

But the point I was making by posting originally, is that a slightly low appraisal is not the end of the world. Make sure the appraiser did his job.
 
We had our bank apprasial done just a week or two ago. It was done on a Wednesday I believe. Our mortgage broker had the priliminary results by Thursday and the official results on Monday ... I believe.
 



New Posts










Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE







New Posts



DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top