Buying A Home
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Appraisal :(

Oyyyyy,

 Well we finally got a word of how much the house appraised and it is 16K lower then the price. We know since the seller is set on his price, he won't go down. We will still try to see if he will go down, but i don't think so.

So i guess it is back to step one! 

 Did anyone have this, what happened at the end? If he does not go down does that mean we can back out and get our deposit back?

Really disappointing !

Re: Appraisal :(

  • It depends on what is in your purchase agreement.

    We had a clause in ours that if the house did not appraise for the purchase price the seller either had to drop the price to meet the appraisal or we could walk away with no penalty.

  • If you have a financing contingency this should fall under that since you can't get a loan for more than the house is worth. Is the appraisal a good one? Sometimes if the appraiser uses completely wrong comps you can fight the appraisal. If it is good the only choice you have is for him to drop the price which would be in his best interest since this will probably happen again if he doesn't or bring the difference to the table. Sorry:(
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  • Our house underappraised by $16k and we met the sellers in the middle. They dropped the price and we made up the difference. We had been searching for about half a year at that point and this was THE best house we'd seen without a doubt and we were willing to pay full asking price for it, so having it knocked down a bit was no problem. We were NOT going to walk away.

    It's up to you. You can try to get them to drop the price and they may surprise you. If they don't come all the way do you have the cash to meet in the middle? 

    ETA: I wouldn't take a hit on a house (like we did) unless you intend for it to be your 'forever' house or your 'for a very long time' house. 

  • Our appraisal was 24K lower than the price we settled on. The seller gave it to use for the appraised price because they would be hard pressed to sell a house higher than its appraised value.
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  • That's tough.  We sold our house and were worried the appraisal would not come back so we had a clause in the purchase papers that they buyers would pay up to 10K over appriased value if it was under the purchase price but it had a max amount they would pay for the house in the papers too.  They ended up paying their max amount. 

    Bottom line is we had time (a year) to sell our house (due to a relocation package) and this was the first offer from the first person that looked at our house.  You never know how the appraisals are going to come back.  Right now you need your realtor to sell that concept to the listing agent and let them know that the next buyer is probably not going to get a higher appraisal...the same thing will only happen again.  Many people meet in the middle at that point. 

  • Before we made an offer we had an independent appraisal done.  The sellers did the same.  Without knowing the results of each others' appraisals we agreed on a price exactly midway between the value of the 2 appraisals (They differed by $20,000).  The bank's appraisal came in $40,000 less than the agreed upon price.  We asked the bank to reconsider their value and provided copies of the other 2 appraisals as well as other, more recent comparable sales.  The bank raised their number by $15,000, which still left a $25,000 gap.  The sellers were unwilling to budge on their price and wanted us to go through a different bank and get a new appraisal (where we live the appraisal only follows the property if you get an FHA loan).  In the end we made up the difference b/c we know the house is in excellent condition, the previous owners made several upgrades to the interior that were not reflected in the banks' appraisal, and all this happened about a week before we were supposed to move from another state with 2 small children.  It wasn't the most financially savvy move, but after a serious consideration of all the factors we decided we were willing to accept that this decision wasn't going to be all about finances.
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