Let's say you and your family have seen the piece of real estate you and your family would like to grow old in. The location is great, the people are great, and the price was perfect. Now as with many house home owners in this position you embark on doing small alterations to your piece of real estate. A little paint in a few rooms, wallpaper there, new hard wood in this part of the home, granite in that room, a ceiling fan here a fixture there. At last you are more than pleased with your newly renovated piece of real estate.
A year or so goes by and you decide you wish to refi for whatever reason. Now pretend you came to the conclusion you could receive a much better interest rate.You begin to tell your broker about all the improvements in your piece of real estate and how great it looks, blah blah blah. Your broker then tells you about the large amount of equity you must have in your home and because of your substantial loan to value ratio they could let you cash-out some of that home equity. No matter whether you attempt to cash-out equity, your dilemma comes when the broker tries to get an home appraisal. The home appraiser shows up and reviews your piece of real estate and heads back to his or her office to type his report. After analyzing the information he or she see that there is a problem, your piece of real estate is huge . . . TOO great for your area.
Your house has become what appraisers would call ?Functionally Obsolescent Due to Super Adequacy?. What this really means is that the renovations you have made to your piece of real estate are superior to the properties in your community and thus the idea of diminishing returns has just kicked you in backside hard. No homes in your area have sold anywhere close to what your piece of real estate SHOULD be worth and lacking appropriate comparable documents to prove your home's value you're stuck. An appraiser will not be able to grant a value to your piece of real estate any higher than the highest sale price in the area. This may not be so bad for some, but for investors looking to cash out or with low LTVs this might be a deal breaker.
If this terribly worries you then you most definitely should consider contracting an property appraiser or real estate broker to provide you a firm opinion. Select a professional that is familiar with your area because they will know more than anyone how much homes are being purchased for and what grade these homes are. Walk your area and locate sale signs in the front yards. If you start to take note of a repeated name then that is your good call for a contact. An property appraiser can go beyond this and provide you a future selling value based on the changes you are interested in doing to your property. This should be tremendously helpful if you have bought a property as an investment.
The moral of the story here is to always are aware of your market area which is normally defined as your immediate and surrounding neighborhood and subdivisions up to one mile from your home. Know what residences sale for and what type of construction quality or amenities they have before you start big time renovations. If you must be Mr. and Mrs. Jones and do your own renovations, don't be surprised when you residence falls victim to the law of diminishing returns.