Appraisal Shopping and Why It Backfires

Consider what actually happens during a typical appraisal process. A vendor sees three agents. Two quote within a similar range, supported by recent comparable sales. The third quotes significantly higher. The vendor, understandably, leans toward the higher figure. They sign. The campaign launches. And within three weeks, the agent who won the listing on the strength of that number is preparing the vendor for a conversation they were not expecting to have this early.

It is a dynamic that costs Gawler vendors money on a regular basis - and the frustrating part is that it is entirely avoidable once you understand the incentive structure behind it. The agent who inflates an appraisal is not making a mistake. They are making a calculated decision. Understanding that changes how you approach every appraisal you receive.

Why Inflated Appraisals Are So Common



The logic from an agent perspective is straightforward. An agent who quotes the market accurately competes on service and track record. An agent who quotes high removes that competition entirely - they give the vendor a reason to sign that has nothing to do with capability. The listing goes to whoever promised the most, not whoever can actually deliver it. That is a rational business decision from the agent side. It is a costly one from the vendor side.

Vendors are not irrational for responding to a higher number. It is entirely understandable. The problem is that the number was never a market assessment - it was a sales tool. Once signed, the vendor is committed to a campaign built around a price the buyer pool has no obligation to meet. In suburbs like Gawler East, Hewett and the surrounding corridor, where comparable sales are visible and buyers are well-researched, an inflated asking price does not take long to expose itself.

The Campaign That Starts Strong and Falls Apart



The first two weeks of a campaign built on an inflated appraisal follow a recognisable pattern. Enquiry is lighter than expected. The feedback from open days is noncommittal. The agent begins managing expectations - carefully at first, then more directly. By week three or four, the price conversation is unavoidable. The vendor who signed on the strength of a high appraisal is now being asked to reduce to where they probably should have launched. And they are being asked to do it with weeks of campaign history working against them.

What Supporting Evidence Should Come With Any Appraisal



The difference between a genuine appraisal and an inflated one is usually visible in what the agent brings to support their figure. Ask them to walk you through the comparable sales. Ask which specific properties settled and at what price. Ask how they arrived at their range and what would need to change for the market to respond differently. An agent with an honest number will welcome those questions. An agent with an inflated one will find ways around them.

Vendors who look carefully into helpful vendor advice ahead of the appraisal stage are less likely to be swayed by a high number without supporting evidence.

What to Ask Before You Sign an Agency Agreement



Choosing the right agent is not primarily about finding the one who quoted highest. It is about finding the one whose quoted figure is supported by the best evidence and whose recent results on comparable stock are the strongest. Those two things - evidence and results - are the only reliable indicators of what a campaign is likely to produce. Everything else is presentation.

Frequently Asked Questions on Agent Selection



How can I tell if an agent is overquoting



An inflated appraisal tends to reveal itself under questioning. The agent becomes vague about the comparable sales, pivots to general statements about the market, or produces comparables from different suburbs or different time periods. A genuine appraisal does not wilt under scrutiny - it is strengthened by it. The agent who welcomes specific questions about methodology is almost always the one worth taking seriously.

Can I get out of an agency agreement if the agent overquoted



Read the agreement before you sign it. Cooling-off periods, notice periods and performance clauses vary. If the agent overquoted materially and the campaign has demonstrably failed to generate the activity a correctly priced listing would have produced, the conversation about early exit is worth having. Most agents would rather part professionally than face a formal dispute process - but you need to understand your position before you have that conversation.

Does getting more appraisals help or just create confusion



Three appraisals is the right number for most vendors. It gives you enough data to identify patterns and outliers without turning the selection process into a full-time job. With three figures you can see where the evidence clusters, identify any outlier that stands well clear of the others, and make a comparison that is genuinely useful rather than overwhelming. More than three tends to add noise rather than clarity.

What is the most important thing to look for in a local agent



Recent results on comparable stock in your specific suburb and price range. Nothing else tells you as much about likely future performance as what they have genuinely achieved recently on properties similar to yours. Ask for it specifically. If they cannot provide it, or if the examples they offer are not genuinely comparable, that tells you something important about the quality of their case for your listing.

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