Are Greenville Home Values Influenced by Foreclosure Sales?

Large sales price reductions notable for bank owned foreclosure and auction sales can cause a significant negative influence to your home appraisal, and thus to your homes value.

A bank owned foreclosure property in your Greenville neighborhood can take several weeks to several months to sell, even when a ready, willing and able buyer presents an offer. Often there are two or more underlying mortgage holders who must approve a sale if it is a short-sale, and we have found that mortgage holders rarely accept the first offer made to them. Bank owned foreclosure sales can be even more damaging when a property appears to be falling in value as it is offered by the agents at an ever decreasing asking price in their attempt to secure offers for the bank. The longer that a foreclosure property remains on the market the more that it appears to the public and lenders that the home and / or the neighborhood is undesirable.

As a Greenville real estate appraiser I am often asked the question, "will the low sales price of a recent bank owned foreclosure sale (REO) or auction sale transacted in my neighborhood negatively influence the appraised value of my home?" It's a difficult question to answer, especially when you are answering it to a woman on the phone who is already crying because she lost her entire life savings when she the equity in her home dropped to zero. Sadly the answer to the question is often yes. If the bank owned foreclosure or auction sale was a "market sale" that was not transacted under duress, it must be considered together with the other neighborhood home sales when the property is appraised.

Appraisers consider, however, the fact that some Eastern North Carolina foreclosure and auction properties are in sub-standard condition. Many foreclosure and auction properties are in need of new paint, flooring, doors, pool repairs, roof repairs, new fixtures or they had some other deferred maintenance that will require a significant cash outlay by the buyer. It is reasonable for an appraiser to adjust a comparable sale upward if the proximate sale was in need of repairs on its sale date.