Tag Archives: internet home values

Zillow Estimate Is No Sure Bet

We get this questions all the time from Homeowners: “why was zillows estimate so low, or so off the appraisal?”  The way I explain it to home owner is this.  Zillows takes all the sales in a zip code or area and runs your property address through complicated logarithms and then comes up with an estimate.

First Zillows does not go into your home. You could have completely updated your home, added square footage and so could your neighbors, and they have no way of verifying it.

Second I use La Jolla as an example.  La Jolla has beach front properties, it has multimillion dollar estates, small cottages with no views, homes with no parking etc.  You could go 10 blocks from the ocean which more than likely will have a whole different value range from beach front.  Well Zillows basically takes all the sales data runs it through some “fancy” math and comes up with an estimate.  The computer cannot quantify what a lot of humans find valuable.

This is why real estate appraisers and real estate agents are so important.  Not only can appraisers use the same complicated math that zillows does they also inspect your property, your neighbor’s property and the neighborhood.    Appraisers and Agents are very familiar with the local market and when it comes to home value, selling, and buying it is a very personal, human activity.

Article: Seattle-based Zillow is the most popular online real-estate information site, with 73 million unique visitors in December.

Along with active listings of properties for sale, it also provides information on houses that are not on the market.

You can enter the address or general location in a database of millions of homes and likely pull up key information — square footage, lot size, number of bedrooms and baths, photos, taxes — plus a Zestimate.

Shoppers, sellers and buyers routinely quote Zestimates to real-estate agents — and to one another — as gauges of market value.

If a house for sale has a Zestimate of $350,000, a buyer might challenge the sellers’ list price of $425,000. Or a seller might demand to know from potential listing agents why they say a property should sell for just $595,000 when Zillow has it at $685,000.

Disparities like these are daily occurrences and, in the words of one real-estate agent who posted on the industry blog ActiveRain, they are “the bane of my existence.”

read more at: http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2025624176_bizharney08xml.html

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

How to Figure the Fuzzy Math of Internet Home Values

Websites may be a good starting place, but when determining the value of your home you need a licensed professional that does not average the sales price of every home within a 1 mile radius.  Imagine you have an ocean front house but the website uses properties across the street (no beach front or ocean view; your property blocks their view, properties blocks away, etc.  How would you figure out the adjustments for your beach front.   Again this is where you need an appraiser.  Contact the appraisers at www.socalappraisalserv.com for you value questions.

Jason Gonsalves worked hard to turn his 6,500-square-foot stucco-and-stone home in the suburbs of Sacramento into the ultimate grown-up party pad, complete with game room, custom wine cellar and an infinity-edge pool overlooking Folsom Lake. When interest rates fell recently, Mr. Gonsalves, who runs a lobbying firm, looked into refinancing his $750,000 mortgage. That’s when he got startling news—the home had dropped more than $200,000 in value while he was renovating.

Or at least, that’s what one real-estate website told him. Another valued the house at only $640,500. And these online estimates left him all the more confused when a real-life appraiser, assessing the house for the refinancing loan, pinned its value at $1.5 million. “I have no idea how those numbers could be so different,” Mr. Gonsalves says.

Right or wrong, they’re the numbers millions of consumers are clamoring for. After years of real-estate pros holding all the informational cards in the home-sale game, Web-driven companies like Zillow, Homes.com and Realtor.com are reshuffling the deck, giving home shoppers and owners estimates of what almost any home is worth. People have flocked to the data in startling numbers: Together, four of the biggest sites that offer home-value estimates get 100 million visits a month, with web surfers using them to determine what to ask or bid for a home, or whether to refinance.

Read the entire article at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204554204577026131448329006.html

Disclaimer: For information and entertainment purposes only.