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How Hard is it to Become a Real Property Appraiser?

How Hard Is It to Become a Real Estate Appraiser?

by The CE Shop Team

The path to becoming a real property appraiser may seem hard. But the reality is, it only seems that way because that path takes time. While there are more stringent education and experience requirements to become an appraiser, the career benefits you'll enjoy far outweigh the challenges of getting there. 

Read on to learn more about the important work of real estate appraisers, the challenges of becoming one, how to overcome them, and how you can successfully break into the field. 

So, How “Hard” Is It to Become an Appraiser? 

The training process to become a licensed real property appraiser requires more of a time investment up front than other real estate careers. But like all careers, it’s all relative. 

It Takes Time to Become an Appraiser 

Between the required Qualifying Education (QE) and hours of experience you need, earning an independent real estate appraiser license takes at least six months. After becoming a Trainee Appraiser (the entry-level appraiser credential), there are three potential independent appraiser licenses you can pursue. Each license has its own appraisal education, experience, and exam requirements. The highest two license levels—Certified Residential Appraiser and Certified General Appraiser—require some college coursework or a bachelor’s degree.  

Here’s a breakdown of the requirements for licensure.  

Appraiser License Level Qualifying Education Hours Required Required Appraisal Experience Hours Working With a Supervisory Appraiser College Degree Requirement Exam Requirement
Trainee Appraiser 75 hours None required Not required Not required
Licensed Residential Appraiser 150 hours 1,000 hours in no less than six months Not required Must pass exam National Uniform Licensing Examination for Licensed Residential Appraisers
Certified Residential Appraiser 200 hours 1,500 hours in no less than 12 months Must complete one of these options: Must pass National Uniform Licensing Examination for Certified Residential Appraisers
Certified General Appraiser 300 hours 3,000 hours in no less than 18 months and 1,500 hours must be in non-residential appraisal work Must have bachelor's degree or higher in any field and from any accredited college or university Must pass National Uniform Licensing Examination for Certified General Appraisers

If you’re currently working full time, you may find it a little challenging to complete these licensing requirements while still working. But plenty of people have done it and so can you. 

Plus, there’s an upside not often found in other real estate fields. Once you complete the initial education hours to earn your trainee license, you can usually find a paid position working for a supervising appraiser to earn your experience hours. This means you can start earning an income early in your training process. 

Learn more about how long it takes to become an appraiser

Why the Path to Become an Appraiser May Feel More Challenging 

Real estate appraisers do meaningful work that influences the U.S. real estate market in big ways. So, it makes sense that the path to become one is longer than the path for other real estate careers.  

Appraisers Estimate Opinions of Property Value  

A real estate appraiser has one main responsibility—to provide an accurate estimated opinion of value for a real estate property based on its highest and best use. It takes a lot of knowledge, training, and expertise to understand how to do that. 

Among the many steps in the appraisal process, appraisers must: 

  • Understand basic appraisal principles and the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP)
  • Learn the different valuation methods in detail and choose the most appropriate one to use when appraising properties of all types 
  • Use savvy research skills, analytical thinking, logic, and mathematics to estimate the value of a home 
  • Write comprehensive appraisal reports documenting methods in detail and share with buyers, lenders, sellers, and real estate agents—all of whom have interest in the results 

New appraisers need several months to a few years of training and on-the-job experience to learn all of the valuation standards and best practices. With so many skills to master and such a big responsibility, it's no wonder why the field is harder to break into than others in real estate.  

An Appraiser’s Work Can Affect Home Values 

As an appraiser, your assessment of value could influence the values of homes on the same street, in the same neighborhood, and sometimes those in an entire city. 

When determining a home’s value, appraisers will factor in the prices of “comps” (recently sold comparable properties), alongside primary home traits, which include: 

  • Location 
  • Age 
  • Square footage 
  • Lot size 
  • Condition 
  • Interior and exterior features 
  • Updates and renovations 

If a home is undervalued during an appraisal, it can negatively affect the future values of similar properties in the area over time. This can be a costly mistake resulting in reverberations across the local real estate market for years to come. 

This is another reason why the education and training requirements for appraisers are lengthy. It takes time and practice to develop the expertise necessary to conduct appraisals accurately. 

Appraised Values Influence Final Purchase Prices  

When a home’s appraised value is lower than a buyer’s accepted offer—known as an “appraisal gap”—lenders won't move forward with mortgage approval. Lenders don’t want to lend more than a house is worth, which leaves the buyer with a few options: try to renegotiate to reduce their purchase price, pay the difference out of pocket, or cancel the sale altogether. 

As you can imagine, these are high stakes for both buyers and sellers. Appraisers have a responsibility to conduct appraisals accurately because, ultimately, their opinions of value can make or break a deal. 

Appraiser Salaries are Lucrative 

Average appraiser salaries trend higher than the national average salary in any field. Salaries are the most lucrative at the advanced license levels. And those levels involve more education requirements and years of on-the-job training for licensing. 

Here’s a breakdown of current median appraiser salaries. 

Appraiser License Level Annual Median Salary
Trainee Appraiser $53,000 annually
Licensed Residential Appraiser $89,000 annually
Certified Residential Appraiser $101,000 annually
Certified General Appraiser $145,000 annually

Source: Appraisal Today, August 2023 

Your eventual salary level as an appraiser - at any license level - depends on your location, the state of the real estate market in your locale, and your ability to secure work (if you plan to work independently). Working for an appraisal firm often means a more stable, but capped, salary. Working as an independent appraiser means the sky’s the limit on how much you can earn. 

Learn more about how much you can expect to make as an appraiser.  

An Appraiser's Job Can Be Demanding 

Some might consider the job of an appraiser demanding given that many parties have an interest in the results of an appraisal report. Lenders want confirmation that a loan amount matches the value of a home since it’s used as collateral. Buyers (and their real estate agents) want favorable appraisals that move deals forward. Sellers hope for higher fair market values to support listing their homes for top dollar. 

These external pressures may make the job feel demanding. But the key is to stick to what you know and what you learned in training. There’s a reason the appraisal field has high standards, expectations, and lengthy training processes. The years of education and experience you’ll undergo translate into deep expertise you’ll always have to lean on, whether it’s Year 1 or Year 50. 

The Bottom Line?

The journey to becoming a home appraiser has its challenges, sure, and it can seem “hard” compared to other careers. But the payoff of a lucrative and fulfilling career as a trusted valuation expert is well worth the journey to get there.

Ready to Get Started in Appraisal With The CE Shop?

 

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