Appraised Value

Lender-supported valuation conclusion used to size financing and measure loan-to-value.

Definition

Appraised value is the value conclusion reached in an appraisal for the property under review. In mortgage lending, it is the number the lender relies on when evaluating the property as security.

Why It Matters

Borrowers may be able to support the mortgage personally, but the lender still needs the property value to support the loan. If the appraised value is lower than expected, the financing plan may need to change.

How It Works in Canada

The appraised value is the result of the appraisal, not just the buyer’s opinion or the seller’s asking price. It may be influenced by comparable sales, property condition, and local market context.

Lenders often treat the lower of purchase price and appraised value as the basis for certain loan-to-value decisions. That is why the appraisal outcome can affect down payment needs even when the contract price is already signed.

Value Numbers Compared

NumberWhat it representsWhy borrowers mix it up
Purchase priceThe contract amount agreed between buyer and sellerIt feels like the most real number in the deal.
Appraised valueThe value conclusion the lender can support on the fileIt directly affects how much financing the lender is willing to rely on.
Assessed valueThe tax-assessment figure used by the local assessment systemIt is visible on public or tax records, so borrowers often assume it should control the mortgage decision.

Practical Example

If a home is under contract for $900,000 but the lender’s appraisal supports only $875,000, the borrower may need to bring more cash to close or renegotiate the deal if financing no longer fits.

Common Misunderstandings

Appraised value is not automatically equal to market value in the way consumers use that phrase casually, and it is definitely not the same as assessed value for tax purposes.

Borrowers also sometimes assume a previous appraisal controls forever. Lenders may require a new appraisal when the transaction or timing changes.

Caveat

Appraised value depends on the valuation date, property condition, lender instructions, and available market evidence. Different appraisers can still reach somewhat different supported values.

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