The home appraisal process is an independent check on what a property is worth. For most first-time buyers, it happens right in the middle of the mortgage. Once your offer is accepted, your lender orders an appraisal. The goal is to confirm the home is worth what you agreed to pay. That number can move your loan, your down payment, and sometimes the deal itself.
- What the appraisal checks, and who orders it
- What to do if the value comes in below your offer
- How local factors in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Dallas shape the result
What the Home Appraisal Process Actually Is
An appraisal is a written opinion of a home’s market value. A licensed appraiser inspects the property and compares it to recent sales nearby. In a typical purchase, your lender orders it. You usually pay for it as part of your closing costs. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau notes that lenders rely on this valuation. It tells them how much they can safely lend against the home.
Value and price are not the same thing, and that is the whole point of the exercise. Your offer is what you agreed to pay. The appraisal is a neutral read on what the market actually supports.
There is a second kind of appraisal worth knowing about. You can hire your own independent appraiser, separate from the lender’s. It gives you a private read on value before you commit. That is often where we come in. You can see the scope of that work on our residential appraisal page. The lender’s appraisal protects the bank. An independent one protects you.
What Appraisers Look At
Appraisers do not guess. They build value from evidence, and a few things carry most of the weight.
Location leads. Two nearly identical houses can appraise very differently. The block, the school boundary, and nearby sales all play a part. Condition comes next. A dated kitchen, a tired roof, or deferred maintenance pull the number down. Recent updates can lift it, including the energy-efficient features that more buyers now pay for.
Size and layout matter too, measured as gross living area rather than the listing’s claims. Then come the comparable sales, usually called comps. These are recent sales of similar homes nearby. The appraiser adjusts for the differences between those homes and yours. Think up for a finished basement, down for a smaller lot. Those adjusted figures anchor the final opinion of value. The closer and more recent the comps, the more reliable that anchor tends to be.
What Happens If the Appraisal Comes In Low
This is the part that catches first-time buyers off guard. If the appraisal lands below your offer, your lender will finance against the lower figure, not your contract price. That gap has to close somehow.
You have a few options. You can renegotiate with the seller. The appraisal is evidence that the home is worth less than you agreed to pay. You can cover the difference in cash if you have it. You can also challenge the appraisal through what the CFPB calls a reconsideration of value. That means pointing to stronger comps or factual errors in the report.
Walking away is on the table too, if your contract includes an appraisal contingency. None of these is fun. But knowing them ahead of time keeps a low number from becoming a panic at closing.
City-Specific Considerations in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Dallas
Local markets shape appraisals more than most buyers expect.
In Chicago, property taxes, ward-level zoning, and neighborhood lines all influence value. Comps from even a few blocks away may not fit. In Philadelphia, historic housing stock and school catchment lines weigh heavily. Older homes there raise condition questions that newer markets do not. In Dallas, fast suburban growth means comps can age quickly. A sale from six months ago may already understate a developing area.
A local appraiser reads these signals. That knowledge is a big part of why the same home can appraise differently from one market to the next.
How to Prepare for Your Appraisal
You cannot control the final number, but you can help the appraiser see the home accurately. Make sure the property is accessible and clean. Have a list of recent upgrades ready, with rough dates and costs. If you are the buyer, ask your agent for the comps behind the offer. That way you can spot a low appraisal early.
One thing not to do: try to influence the appraiser toward a number. Their independence is what makes the report credible, and pushing on it tends to backfire. Treat the appraisal as useful information rather than a judgment on your choice. A clear-eyed read of value is what keeps you from overpaying, and it is worth getting right before you sign.
Want an Independent Read Before You Buy?
A private appraisal from PahRoo tells you what a home is really worth before you commit. It covers Chicago, Philadelphia, and Dallas. Know your number before the bank tells you theirs.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the home appraisal process?
It is an independent assessment of a property’s market value. A licensed appraiser inspects the home and compares it to recent nearby sales. In a purchase, your lender usually orders it after your offer is accepted.
Who pays for the appraisal when buying a home?
The buyer typically pays for the lender’s appraisal as part of closing costs, even though the lender orders it. You can also pay for your own independent appraisal if you want a second, private opinion of value.
What happens if the appraisal is lower than my offer?
Your lender will finance against the lower value. From there, you have options. You can renegotiate the price, pay the difference in cash, or challenge the appraisal. You can also use your contract’s appraisal contingency to walk away.
How long does a home appraisal take?
The on-site inspection usually takes under an hour for a typical single-family home. The full written report often takes a few days to a week. It depends on the appraiser’s workload and the property’s complexity.
Can I get my own appraisal separate from the lender’s?
Yes. Buyers can hire an independent appraiser for a private opinion of value before making or finalizing an offer. This is common when you want an unbiased read that is not tied to the lender’s process.
Need an Independent Appraisal?
PahRoo Appraisal & Consultancy provides independent residential valuations across Chicago, Philadelphia, and Dallas, led by Michael Hobbs. Maybe you are buying your first home. Maybe you just want a private read before you make an offer. Either way, our residential appraisal team can help. Reach us any time through our contact page.