Two appraisers can look at the same marital home and reach different numbers, both correct. The reason is usually the date of value. Set it on one day and the house is worth one figure. Set it on another, and the number moves. In a divorce, that single choice can shift a settlement by thousands, which is why the date of value in a divorce appraisal deserves attention early, not after the report lands.
- What the date of value is and why it changes the number
- Which date Illinois courts generally use for the marital home
- When a retrospective appraisal is the right tool
What the Date of Value Means in a Divorce Appraisal
The date of value, also called the effective date, is the exact day an appraiser’s opinion of value applies to. It is not always the day the appraiser visits the home. The appraiser can measure market value as of today, or as of a date in the past, and the report states which one it used.
This matters because markets move. Interest rates shift, inventory tightens, a neighborhood heats up or cools off. So a home worth one figure in the spring may carry a different figure by the fall. The Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice treat the effective date as a core part of the assignment, and a credible report ties every comparable sale back to it.
Which Date Illinois Courts Use
Illinois gives the court discretion here, but there is a strong default. Under 750 ILCS 5/503, marital property is generally valued as of the date of trial, or the date the marriage is dissolved, using a fair market value standard. The court can pick another date if the parties agree or if the facts call for it.
One rule trips people up. The separation date is usually not the valuation date. Value tends to keep accruing until the case is decided, so growth in the home’s worth between separation and trial often stays in the marital estate. Courts also avoid using different dates for different assets, which keeps the division consistent.
When a Retrospective Appraisal Comes In
Sometimes the question is not what the home is worth now, but what it was worth years ago. That is a retrospective appraisal. The appraiser sets a past effective date, such as the date of marriage, and reconstructs the market using sales that closed around that time.
This is often how a spouse traces separate property. If one party owned the home before the marriage, the value at the date of marriage helps separate premarital equity from the appreciation that built up during it. CPAs lean on the same figure to keep the tax and division math straight. So the choice of date is not a technicality. It decides what counts as marital in the first place.
How the Date Moves the Number
Picture a home that a couple bought near a market peak, then watched cool as rates climbed. An appraisal dated at filing might land higher than one dated at trial a year later. Neither is wrong. They answer different questions.
That gap is exactly why the effective date can become a bargaining point. A spouse hoping for a lower buyout may prefer a softer date, while the other pushes for the stronger one. The appraiser does not pick sides. But the attorney who sets the date early controls the terms of the fight instead of reacting to a number that already exists.
Set the Date Before You Order the Appraisal
Decide the effective date first, then order the work to match. If the case may need both a current value and a past one, say so up front, because a retrospective analysis takes different data. Confirm the appraiser can support the chosen date with real sales from that period, and can explain the choice if the report is challenged. Timing is a decision, so make it on purpose.
Need the Value Fixed to the Right Date?
PahRoo prepares both current and retrospective divorce appraisals, tied to the effective date your case needs and ready to defend.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the date of value in a divorce appraisal?
The date of value, also called the effective date, is the specific day an appraiser’s opinion of value applies to. It fixes the moment the home’s market value is measured. Two appraisals of the same house with different effective dates can reach different numbers, because the market moves over time.
Does a home get appraised at the date of separation or the date of trial?
In Illinois, marital property is generally valued as of the date of trial or the date the marriage is dissolved, not the date of separation. Under 750 ILCS 5/503, the court has discretion to use the trial date or another date the parties agree to, so the separation date is usually not the valuation date.
What is a retrospective appraisal?
A retrospective appraisal estimates what a property was worth on a specific past date, such as the date of marriage. The appraiser reconstructs the market as of that date using sales that closed around then. It is common when tracing how much of a home’s value is separate versus marital property.
Can the chosen date change the settlement?
Yes. Because home values shift over time, the effective date can change the appraised value, and that changes the equity each spouse divides. In a fast-moving market, the gap between two candidate dates can be large enough to matter in a negotiation.
Can you appraise a home for a past date?
Yes. A licensed appraiser can prepare a retrospective appraisal with a past effective date, relying on comparable sales from that period rather than today’s market. The report states the effective date clearly, so everyone knows what point in time the value reflects.
Need an Independent Divorce Appraisal?
PahRoo Appraisal & Consultancy prepares current and retrospective valuations across Cook County and the wider Chicago area. For background on how we support attorneys and their clients, see our overview of appraisals in divorce proceedings and our residential appraisal services, or contact us to set the right effective date for your case.