Special offer

Internet Home Value Calculators - How Accurate Are They?

Reblogger
Real Estate Agent with Realty One Group Capital MovingToNova.com

This is a very important article for Alexandria VA homebuyers to read and understand when it comes to trying to get a grip on the Northern Virginia real estate market.  Our area is, and always has been an anomaly when it comes to real estate home values.  The same house built by the same builder with the same upgrades can be $775,000 inside the beltway, and $425,000 in Lake Ridge or even Triangle.

Factor in McMansions, walking distance to metro, a sought-after school district, a park, or even a parkway and there is not a website around that will get it right.  That's exatly why you should seek the help of a knowledgeable, local Realtor to help you determine the value of a home that you'd like to sell or buy.

Original content by Myrl Jeffcoat

Occasionally, I will hear or read comments from homebuyers, homeowners, sellers and real estate professionals, about the value and use of online housing calculators that provide estimates of property value.

Earlier this week, I came across an interesting article in the Yahoo Finance section titled, “The Fuzzy Math of Home Values,” which delved deeply into this topic.

 

The article was written by Alyssa Abkowitz, of Wall Street Journal’s SmartMoney.  In one case vignette, Abkowitz showcased Jason Gonsalves, of our Greater Sacramento area.  Gonsalves had invested hard work to turn his 6,500 square foot home in the Sacramento suburbs into an ultimate grown-up party pad.  The home boasted a custom wine cellar, game room and a home theater.  There was a wood-burning pizza oven, and searing station outside.  An infinity-edge pool overlooked the lapping waters of Folsom Lake.  BUT as Gonsalves was finishing up on his home improvements, and delved into refinancing his $750,000 mortgage, he became startled when according to one popular real estate website, his home value had dropped over $200,000 during a recent seven-month stretch.

Another on-line real estate estimating website valued Gonsalve’s home at a mere $640,500.  Adding confusion to the picture – a real-life appraiser had valued the house at $1.5 million.

According to SmartMoney Magazine, the calculations behind online estimates are adding confusion to an already tricky housing market.

As increasing numbers of consumers are groping for information in a cloudy housing arena, the home-value technology provided by Zillow, Homes.com, and Realtor.com have offered an alternative for consumers.  In the past years real estate professionals generally held most of the real estate informational data.  But with today’s fingertip technology, homebuyers, home sellers and owners can key up almost any home, in hopes of learning what a home is worth.

 

However, critics say, the estimates can be far rougher than most consumers realize.  Variations in home valuation can vary 20, 30 or even 50 percent higher or lower than a property’s eventual sale price.

 

The on-line companies, which provide their valuation estimators, rely on the use of algorithms.  Because these algorithms often change, the values of homes often change.  According to the SmartMoney article, this summer Zillow made adjustments that affected all of the 100 million homes in its database, and some home value quotes swung by hundreds of thousands of dollars in as little as a month.  A special Louisville, Kentucky home which according to legend, acted as inspiration for Daisy’s home in The Great Gatsby, quadrupled in value over 30 days.  While according to Zillow, a Brooklyn, N.Y. townhouse currently listed for $5 million, was valued at a jaw-dropping $31 million in the middle of the real estate crash.

The former owners of the “Gatsby house,” watched Zillow put a $331,000 value on the house in May.  In July it had climbed to $1.5 million.  Zillow claimed the lower estimate reflected errors in its statistical model.  The sellers had to fend off a stream of lowball offers before they ultimately sold their dwelling this autumn.

 

Zillow, Trulia, Homes.com and all their competitors make clear their numbers are only guesstimates.  They present disclaimers about information and material consumers garner from their websites.  However, homeowners don’t always pay attention to the disclaimers. 

 

In most of real estate history, home values have been an appraiser’s task.  The process involves gathering data on recently sold properties in the vicinity, and comparing them with the “subject property.”  Size, condition and characteristics, are components considered.  Unique qualities and added amenities, such as a swimming pool can add value.  The appraisal process is as much art as science.

 

The SmartMoney article written by Alyssa Abkowitz is really an in-depth piece that goes more deeply into the process of home appraisal and the use of on-line calculators.  I recommend consumers and real estate pros read it in its entirety.  It can be accessed via: “The Fuzzy Math of Home Values.”



Real Living Great West Real Estate
(916) 635-0420
http://www.myrljeffcoat.com

 

 

Comments (0)