Divorce home appraisal of a marital home, with keys and a property settlement document.
7 July

When a marriage ends, the house is usually the largest asset on the table. Both spouses want a number they can trust, and many start by asking a real estate agent what the home would list for. That figure has a job to do. A divorce home appraisal does a different job, and courts treat the two very differently.

By the end of this article, you’ll know:

  • What separates a divorce home appraisal from a broker price opinion
  • Why courts want an independent, standards-based value
  • When your situation actually calls for a formal appraisal

What a Divorce Home Appraisal Actually Measures

A divorce home appraisal is an independent opinion of a property’s market value, prepared by a licensed or certified appraiser. The appraiser inspects the home, studies comparable sales, and documents how each conclusion was reached. The report follows the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice, or USPAP, the recognized rulebook for appraisers in the United States.

The point of the report is defensibility. A judge, an opposing attorney, or a spouse can question the number, and the appraiser has to stand behind it. So the work is built for scrutiny, not for a quick answer. PahRoo prepares these reports as part of its residential appraisal services, with the divorce context in mind from the first phone call.

Where a Broker Price Opinion Fits, and Where It Falls Short

A broker price opinion, or BPO, is an agent’s estimate of what a home could sell for. A comparative market analysis, the close cousin most sellers see, does much the same thing. Both are useful tools. Agents produce them quickly, often at no charge, to help set a listing price or win the listing.

The catch is the purpose behind the number. A pricing tool is built to move a house, so it leans toward what will attract buyers or reassure the seller. It also skips the formal standards an appraisal must follow. A trusted agent’s read on the market has real value early in a case. It just was not built to survive an opposing expert or a skeptical judge. So if you rest a contested value on a listing estimate, you hand the other side an easy target.

Appraisal vs. Broker Price Opinion at a Glance

  Divorce Home Appraisal Broker Price Opinion
Prepared by Licensed or certified appraiser Real estate agent or broker
Built for A defensible opinion of market value Setting or winning a listing
Follows USPAP Yes No
Holds up in court Designed to, and the appraiser can testify Easy for opposing counsel to challenge
Cost and speed Fee-based, takes longer to produce Often free and fast
Best use in divorce Contested value, buyout, refinance, trial Early ballpark when both sides agree

Why Courts Lean on the Appraisal

Illinois divides marital property by equitable distribution. Under 750 ILCS 5/503, the court splits property in “just proportions,” which does not always mean a straight 50/50 cut. The statute also directs judges to make specific findings on the value of each asset.

A court cannot make those findings on a guess. It needs a value that was developed under recognized methods and can survive cross-examination. An appraisal is designed to do that. A price opinion, however helpful for listing, was never meant to carry that weight.

When Your Case Actually Needs One

Not every separation calls for a formal appraisal. If both spouses agree on the value and plan to sell, an agent’s pricing may be enough to get moving. The appraisal earns its cost when the number is contested or the stakes are high.

The most common trigger is a buyout, where one spouse keeps the home and pays the other for their share. You also want a defensible value when the parties disagree on price, when a lender requires it for a refinance, or when the case is heading toward trial. In each of those, a soft number invites a challenge down the road.

Start With a Value That Holds Up

If the house sits at the center of your settlement, begin with a number built to withstand pressure. An independent appraisal costs more than a quick estimate and takes longer to produce. It also removes a common source of delay, because neither side can easily wave it away. Ask early whether your situation needs one, then order it from an appraiser who will explain and defend the work.

Need a Value Both Sides Can Trust?

PahRoo prepares court-ready, USPAP-compliant appraisals for divorcing homeowners and their attorneys. Get one number that stands up to scrutiny.

Request Your Appraisal

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a divorce home appraisal?

A divorce home appraisal is an independent, USPAP-compliant opinion of a marital home’s market value, prepared by a licensed or certified appraiser to support property division. It documents the comparable sales and reasoning behind the value, so it can hold up if a spouse, attorney, or judge questions it.

Is a realtor’s price opinion accepted in a divorce?

A realtor’s price opinion can inform early discussions, but courts generally prefer a formal appraisal when the value is contested. A price opinion is built to set a listing price, not to meet appraisal standards, so it is easier to challenge in a property division dispute.

Who should appraise a house in a divorce?

A licensed or certified real estate appraiser should value the home, ideally one experienced with divorce work and willing to testify if needed. Some couples save time and money by jointly retaining one neutral appraiser instead of each hiring their own.

How much does a divorce home appraisal cost?

The cost depends on the property type, its complexity, and whether court testimony may be required. A standard single-family home runs less than a luxury or multi-unit property that needs deeper analysis. PahRoo quotes each assignment individually, so you can request an estimate for your specific home.

Can you use a Zillow estimate in a divorce?

A Zillow estimate is an automated model, not an appraisal, and it cannot account for a specific home’s condition or recent updates. Courts do not treat it as reliable evidence of value, so it should not anchor a settlement. An appraisal gives a defensible figure instead.

Need an Independent Divorce Appraisal?

PahRoo Appraisal & Consultancy has valued homes across Cook County and the wider Chicago area since 1999. Our team prepares reports for attorneys, homeowners, and other professionals who need a value that stands up. To learn more, read our overview of appraisals in divorce proceedings, or contact us to talk through your situation.