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North Carolina Real Estate Appraisals

Locate a North Carolina Property Appraiser using Appraiser Scout. We have a database of appraisers ready to get your North Carolina Real Estate Appraisal completed. North Carolina Appraisers are professionals in their field and will work hard to get you the Real Estate Appraisal you need quickly and accurately. All of the North Carolina Property Appraisers are state licensed and must complete required continuing education courses to maintain their license. Knowing you had your North Carolina Appraisal done right the first time can put your day at ease.

If you are a North Carolina Property Appraiser and wish to be part of our website, join us today.

North Carolina Real Estate Appraisers/Improvement Description

North Carolina real estate appraisers alongside their associate appraisers located throughout the United States are generally required to use the URAR form report, otherwise known as the uniform residential appraisal report when completing an appraisal assignment for a federally regulated financial institution. Once your North Carolina real estate appraisal professional has identified the scope of work to be performed, has identified the subject property, neighborhood boundaries, and site characteristics, the next step is to define any improvements found on the site to be appraised.

North Carolina appraisers are aware that an overall general description of the subjects improvement, including the number of units, age, roof surface, exterior walls, design, etc. all need to be discussed in the section. The report also requires a listing of room counts for each dwelling located on the property. Generally a room can be described as an interior space of at least 90 square feet that maintains at least three walls. This description is offered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and is a good guideline when determining whether an area inside the dwelling is actually a room or not.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development offers North Carolina real estate appraisers additional guidelines when considering whether a room can be considered as a bedroom. According to these guidelines a bedroom must have at least 90 square feet, four walls with a door, a built in closet, and a primary source of heating. The source of heating must be permanently affixed and be able to maintain a minimum temperature of 50° year-round.

Some North Carolina real estate appraisers may choose to consider what constitutes a bathroom by considering the number of fixtures present. If a bathroom consists of a shower or tub, a sink and a water closet, most North Carolina appraisers would consider this to be a full bath. Rooms consisting of just a water closet and a sink are considered by many to be a one half bath.

Your North Carolina real estate appraisal professional will be able to determine how the market perceives these different room classifications and adjust their differing impacts on value.


North Carolina counties
 
 
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