The appraisal is the part of the home buying process that makes everyone nervous. A licensed appraiser, hired by your lender, determines the market value of the property, and that number has real consequences. If the appraisal comes in at or above the purchase price, you move forward. If it comes in low, you have a problem to solve. Here’s how the whole process works, with specific attention to how Central Oregon’s unique property landscape affects things.
What an Appraisal Actually Is
An appraisal is a licensed professional’s opinion of a property’s market value on a specific date. It’s not a home inspection (that’s about condition), and it’s not a tax assessment (that’s for property tax purposes and often doesn’t reflect current market value). The appraisal is specifically about what a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in the current market.
Your lender requires an appraisal because they want to confirm that the home is worth at least what they’re lending you to buy it. If you default on your mortgage, the lender needs to know they can recover their investment by selling the property. That’s the lender’s motivation, but the appraisal also protects you from overpaying.
Who Orders the Appraisal
Since the 2008 financial crisis, lenders cannot directly hire appraisers they have a relationship with. Instead, appraisals are ordered through an Appraisal Management Company (AMC), which assigns the job to a licensed appraiser. You pay for the appraisal (typically $450 to $700 in Central Oregon, more for complex properties), but you don’t get to choose the appraiser.
This can be a challenge in Central Oregon because the AMC might assign an appraiser who isn’t deeply familiar with the specific submarket. An appraiser from Portland who gets assigned a property in Sunriver may not fully understand the nuances of resort community pricing. If this happens, your agent and lender can sometimes request a local appraiser, though this isn’t guaranteed.
What Appraisers Evaluate
The Property Visit
The appraiser visits the property and evaluates:
- Size and layout: They measure the home’s gross living area (GLA). This is the above-grade, heated, finished living space. Basements and bonus rooms may or may not count depending on how they’re finished and whether they meet local building code as habitable space.
- Condition: The overall state of the home, from the roof to the foundation. They’re not doing an inspection, but they note obvious deficiencies.
- Quality of construction: Materials, finishes, and craftsmanship. A home with granite counters, hardwood floors, and custom cabinetry will appraise differently from one with laminate throughout.
- Functional utility: Does the layout make sense? A 4-bedroom home with only one bathroom, or a home where you have to walk through one bedroom to reach another, has functional issues that affect value.
- Site and location: Lot size, views, proximity to amenities, noise, and other location factors. In Central Oregon, a Cascade mountain view can add significant value.
The Comparable Sales Analysis
This is the core of most residential appraisals. The appraiser identifies 3 to 6 recently sold properties that are similar to the subject property and uses them to establish a value range.
“Comparable” means similar in:
- Location (ideally within the same neighborhood or subdivision)
- Size (within about 20% of the subject’s square footage)
- Age and condition
- Number of bedrooms and bathrooms
- Lot size
- Sale date (ideally within the last 3 to 6 months)
The appraiser then adjusts the comparable sale prices for differences. If a comp had 3 bedrooms and the subject has 4, the appraiser adds a value for that extra bedroom. If a comp had a pool and the subject doesn’t, the appraiser subtracts value. These adjustments are supposed to be based on local market data about what buyers actually pay for each feature.
Why Central Oregon Appraisals Can Be Complicated
Central Oregon’s real estate market creates some unique appraisal challenges:
Unique and Custom Properties
Central Oregon has a lot of custom homes. A 2,800-square-foot custom log home on 5 acres near Tumalo is hard to compare to anything because there may not be many similar properties that have sold recently. When good comps don’t exist, the appraiser has to reach further geographically or further back in time, which introduces more uncertainty.
Large Price Ranges Within Neighborhoods
Some Central Oregon areas have wide price ranges. In parts of northwest Bend, you might find homes ranging from $600,000 to $1,500,000 within a few blocks, depending on lot size, views, and updates. This makes comp selection more subjective.
Resort Communities
Properties in Sunriver, Eagle Crest, Brasada Ranch, and similar resort communities have their own valuation dynamics. HOA amenities (pools, golf courses, equestrian facilities) affect value, and properties with short-term rental history may be valued partly on income potential. Comparing a Sunriver home to a standard Bend subdivision home isn’t appropriate, even if they’re similar in size.
Rural Acreage
Central Oregon has plenty of properties on 2, 5, 10, or even 40+ acres. Appraising these requires accounting for land value separately from improvement value, and finding comparable sales of similar acreage can be difficult. Water rights, timber value, and agricultural use further complicate things.
Rapid Market Movements
When prices are moving quickly, whether up or down, appraisals based on sales from 3 to 6 months ago may not reflect the current market. Appraisers can account for market trends, but there’s inherent lag in the comparable sales approach. Check current market conditions to understand what’s happening with prices and inventory.
What Happens When the Appraisal Comes in Low
A low appraisal means the appraiser valued the property below the agreed purchase price. If you offered $550,000 and the appraisal comes in at $520,000, your lender will only lend based on $520,000. That creates a $30,000 gap someone needs to cover.
Your Options
Renegotiate the purchase price. Ask the seller to reduce the price to the appraised value or somewhere between. This is the most common resolution. The seller’s motivation matters: if they have backup offers, they have less incentive to reduce. If they need to sell quickly, they’re more likely to negotiate.
Cover the gap with cash. If you have the funds, you can pay the difference between the appraised value and the purchase price out of pocket. You’d still get a loan based on the appraised value, but you bring extra cash to closing. This effectively means you’re paying more than the appraiser thinks the home is worth, which is a decision you should make with your eyes open.
Split the difference. The buyer brings some extra cash and the seller reduces the price. This is often the compromise that keeps deals together.
Challenge the appraisal. Your lender can request a Reconsideration of Value (ROV) if there’s evidence the appraiser missed relevant comparable sales or made errors. Your agent can provide additional comps and market data. This doesn’t always work, but it’s worth trying if you believe the appraisal was genuinely inaccurate.
Walk away. If you have an appraisal contingency in your contract (which you should), you can terminate the agreement and receive your earnest money back if you can’t resolve the gap.
Appraisal Gap Coverage
In competitive markets, buyers sometimes include an appraisal gap clause in their offer, stating they’ll cover a shortfall up to a certain amount. For example, you might offer $550,000 with appraisal gap coverage up to $20,000. This means if the appraisal comes in at $535,000, you’ll bring an extra $15,000 cash and still close at the contract price.
This makes your offer stronger in a competitive situation, but only commit to a gap you can actually afford. And understand that you’re agreeing to pay more than an independent professional says the home is worth.
How to Prepare for a Smooth Appraisal
Whether you’re the buyer or the seller, there are things that can help the appraisal go well:
For Sellers
- Provide the appraiser with a list of recent improvements and their costs
- Make sure the home is clean and accessible (the appraiser needs to see and measure every room)
- Ensure all utilities are on
- Provide documentation for any permits pulled for renovations
- Don’t follow the appraiser around or try to sell them on the home’s value. They’re trained professionals doing a job.
For Buyers and Agents
- Provide the appraiser with a list of comparable sales you believe support the purchase price
- Include relevant market data (days on market trends, absorption rates, multiple offer situations)
- Note any specific features that affect value (views, recent renovations, proximity to amenities)
Appraisal vs Market Value vs Assessed Value
These three numbers are often confused but they measure different things:
Appraised value: What a licensed appraiser determines the home is worth on the date of the appraisal, based on comparable sales and professional judgment. Used for lending purposes.
Market value: What a buyer is actually willing to pay. In competitive markets, this can be above the appraised value. In slower markets, homes may sell below appraised value.
Assessed value: What the county assessor values the property at for tax purposes. In Oregon, Measure 50 limits annual assessed value increases to 3% per year, so assessed values are often significantly below market value, especially for properties that haven’t changed hands recently. Don’t use assessed value as a guide for what a home is worth in the current market.
Understanding the appraisal process helps you navigate one of the trickier parts of a real estate transaction. It’s an imperfect science, especially in a market as diverse as Central Oregon, but it’s an important safeguard for both buyers and lenders.
Questions about how appraisals might affect your transaction? Our team can walk you through what to expect for the specific type of property you’re looking at.