What Lenders Look For In An Appraisal Report

Clear insight into how lenders and underwriters evaluate real estate appraisals across the GTA and surrounding areas.

Overview

An appraisal is written for one audience, the lender.

While homeowners read the report, the appraisal is designed to answer the questions lenders and underwriters ask when assessing risk. This article explains how lenders interpret appraisal reports, what they focus on, and why certain details matter more than others.

Understanding this will help you prepare properly, avoid surprises and feel confident about the valuation process.

Why This Matters

Financing decisions rely heavily on the strength and supportability of the appraisal.

When lenders review a report, they are not looking for opinions or estimates. They are looking for evidence. Every part of the report must be consistent, logical and backed by real market data.

If something is unclear, unsupported or inconsistent, lenders may pause funding, request revisions or decline the report. Knowing what they examine helps clients avoid unnecessary delays.

Core Lender Priorities

Lenders follow a predictable hierarchy when reviewing an appraisal. Their goal is to confirm that the value conclusion is reasonable, well supported and aligned with market behaviour.

Strong, Supportable Comparables

This is the foundation. Lenders look for:

  • Proximity within the neighbourhood
  • Recent sale dates
  • Logical matching of style, size and condition
  • Few and reasonable adjustments
Weak comparables are the fastest way for a report to be questioned.

Logical, Consistent Adjustments

Lenders look for adjustments that follow market behaviour.
Examples:

  • Larger homes should adjust downward when compared to smaller ones
  • Renovated homes should adjust against original condition homes predictably
  • Lot premiums must be realistic and evidence based
Random or excessive adjustments are a red flag.

Accurate Property Details

Underwriters cross check:

  • Living area
  • Basement finish
  • Bedroom and bathroom count
  • Lot size
  • Condo fees
  • Property type designation
Any mismatch with MLS or public records must be explained.

Condition and Upgrades

Lenders look for clear, well documented condition ratings and photos.
If the home is renovated, the report must show it.
If it is original, the report cannot imply otherwise.

Legal Use and Zoning

Underwriters verify that the property:

  • Is legally used as described
  • Has no zoning conflicts
  • Has legal rental units where applicable
  • Meets local municipal standards
Unauthorized units or unpermitted work can affect lending decisions.

Market Commentary

Lenders expect a clear explanation of:

  • Local supply
  • Demand trends
  • Median sale price movement
  • How the comparables reflect current market behaviour
Market commentary protects the lender by showing the appraiser understands local conditions.

Income Data for Rental Properties

For income producing or tenanted homes, lenders look for:

  • Market rent
  • Actual rent
  • Vacancy assumptions
  • Expense patterns
  • Cap rate analysis if required
Missing rental data can delay mortgage approvals.

Red Flags Lenders Watch For

These are the elements underwriters question immediately:

• Comparables far outside the neighbourhood
• Old sales used without time adjustments
• Unsupported lot premiums
• Large adjustments without explanation
• Missing or unclear photos
• Conflicting condition ratings
• Unverified upgrades
• Missing market commentary
• Value conclusions that contradict the comparables

Each of these raises risk and may require the lender to request revisions.

How Underwriters Review Reports

Underwriters approach appraisal reports with a structured, analytical process:

  1. They verify property details

They cross check public records, previous listings and internal databases.

  1. They test the comparables

They look at each comparable and ask,
“Would a reasonable buyer consider this property similar?”

  1. They check adjustment patterns

Adjustments must reflect market behaviour, not appraiser preference.

  1. They evaluate the logic of the reconciliation

The final value must align with the comparables, not exceed or stretch beyond them.

  1. They assess risk

Properties with legal issues, unpermitted work or unusual layouts receive extra scrutiny.

  1. They confirm compliance with lender standards

Institutional lenders, private lenders and mortgage insurers all have specific requirements.

FAQ

Can lenders override an appraisal?

Lenders cannot change the value, but they can decline the report or request revisions if they feel the support is weak.

Can a client influence the appraisal?

No. The appraiser must remain independent. Clients can provide documents, but not direction.

What happens if a lender disagrees with a report?

They may request additional comparables, adjustments or clarification. In rare cases, they may order a second appraisal.

If you want clarity before your appraisal or you need help understanding lender expectations, our team is here to help.