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Covington Real Estate Agent, Covington Realtor, Envoy Mortgage, Louisiana Real Estate, Mandeville Real Estate Agent, Mandeville Realtor, Mortgage, New Orleans Real Estate, Real Estate Home Buyer, Real Estate Home Seller, Real Estate Market, St. Tammany Real Estate Agent, St. Tammany Realtor, Tepper GroupPublished December 16, 2025
Why Your Appraisal Does Not Match Today’s Market
Why Your Appraisal Does Not Match Today’s Market
Market value is set by competition, demand, and buyer behavior,
not the number written on an appraisal report.
Most people think a home priced below appraisal value should sell fast. It feels like a built-in deal. Yet many of these homes sit on the market with no activity. The reason is simple: Appraisal value and market value are not the same thing.
Today, I’m going to explain the difference so you can avoid pricing mistakes and use the latest housing data in your area to your advantage.
Why appraisal values look backward. An appraisal focuses on past sales. Appraisers study closed transactions from the last six to twelve months. If there are not enough good matches, they may reach even further back or use expired listings to justify a number.
Appraisals value essentials such as roofs, windows, wiring, plumbing, and other core systems. These items matter, but they move slowly and create a value picture based on what happened, not what is happening today. Appraisal value is the steak, not the sizzle.
Why market value looks at today’s competition. Market value starts with one question. What are buyers choosing between right now? A professional market analysis examines active listings, comparable homes, current trends, and the pending ratio. If many homes look like yours, buyers have more choices and can pressure your price down. If inventory is low, your price rises. Pending sales show where demand is today.
A high pending ratio means strong buyer activity. A low pending ratio means buyers are selective. These are real-time signals that shape true market value.
Why the sizzle matters to buyers. Buyers care about what they see. They can overlook a new roof if the home still has pink carpet, outdated flooring, or tired paint. Updated kitchens, clean bathrooms, and simple staging help buyers picture themselves in a space. Even with strong mechanical systems, poor presentation can hurt your price. Market value reflects both the steak and the sizzle because buyers decide based on emotion and competition.
“Market value is set by today’s buyers, not by a number written in an appraisal report.”
