The Judgement Layer Behind Every Appraisal
Most sellers assume a second opinion will confirm the first. Sometimes it does. Often it does not. That gap is worth understanding rather than dismissing.
Property appraisals are not produced by a formula. Data feeds the process, but the output is a professional opinion. Opinions differ - even well-informed ones based on the same underlying evidence.
A well-reasoned appraisal can sit at the upper end of that range. Another well-reasoned appraisal can sit lower. Both can be defensible. The question worth asking is not which number is right - it is what reasoning produced each one.
How Different Comparable Choices Produce Different Figures
The raw data is available to all agents. The judgement about which recent sales are most relevant to this specific property is not uniform.
Recency, proximity, condition similarity, land attributes - agents assign different weight to each variable. Small differences in that weighting compound across three or four comparables. The result is a gap at the end.
Local market knowledge shapes comparable selection significantly. An agent who has been active in the Gawler area consistently will know which streets generate stronger buyer interest, which pockets outperform the broader suburb, and which results reflected unusual circumstances that should be discounted. That knowledge filters which comparables are treated as signal and which are treated as noise.
Why Property Condition Is Assessed Subjectively
Walk two experienced agents through the same property and they will notice the same things. They will not necessarily assign the same dollar values to what they see.
Neither is guessing. Both are drawing on observed buyer behaviour. The behaviour they have each observed may genuinely differ.
What looks cosmetic to one buyer looks like a discount to another.
Presentation affects the assessment in ways that are real but imprecise. A well-presented home in good condition is easier to appraise with confidence. A tired home in a mixed condition state gives agents more variables to interpret - and more room to diverge.
That is normal. It has always been normal.
Why Agent Confidence in the Market Shapes Numbers
Experience in the current market - not just the historical market - changes how an agent reads the range.
Agents also differ in how much they lead the market versus reflect it. Some price to where they believe the market is heading. Others anchor tightly to where it has been. Both approaches have merit. They produce different numbers.
None of this makes one agent better than the other. It makes them human interpreters of a living market - one that does not hold still long enough to be read identically by two different people at the same moment.
What to Do With Two Different Numbers
Do not average them and treat the midpoint as the answer. That is not analysis. It is arithmetic.
An agent who delivers a figure without a clear methodology is offering optimism, not analysis.
The most useful thing two appraisals can do is help you understand the range. Where does the evidence support confidence. Where does it start to rely on assumptions. Knowing that boundary is what allows you to price with intention rather than hope.
What Sellers Ask About Valuation Variations
Is the highest appraisal the most accurate one?
Higher is not always better. Achievable is better.
Is a large gap between appraisals a warning sign?
Some variation is expected. Two well-reasoned appraisals on the same property can legitimately differ by five to ten percent and both remain defensible. A gap larger than that is worth questioning - it suggests agents are working from meaningfully different comparable sets, different condition assessments, or different market confidence levels. Ask both agents to explain their reasoning before drawing conclusions.
Why do some sellers choose the agent with the highest appraisal?
Some sellers do choose the highest figure, particularly when the gap feels significant. This is understandable but carries risk. An agent who has overestimated to secure the listing may then manage a price reduction process - which is a worse experience than a well-managed campaign at a realistic price. Select the agent whose reasoning is clearest, not whose number is largest.
Should I ask agents to explain how they reached their number?
Good agents welcome the questions. It is how they demonstrate that the number is grounded.
In the Gawler market, the sellers who ask the right questions at the appraisal stage tend to make the pricing decisions that hold up under pressure. housing estimate differences is where local appraisal expertise and current market knowledge come together.