Investors: Your Appraisal Has an Expiration Date.
If you miss it, you can get trapped with one, miserable lender. â An investor called me up this week with a deal thatâs been dragging for 5 months. â He got a solid appraisal and now wants to transfer it to a different lender. â Hereâs the problem: đşLenders look at the original appraisal report date in order to accept a transfer đşYou can *sometimes* get a Recertification of Value from the same appraiser đşThat recert window typically runs 60â180 days from the original appraisal date, and it varies by lender đşOnce youâre outside that window, many lenders will require a BRAND NEW appraisal â What does this mean for you? â đ Early on, you can still shop lenders and transfer the appraisal đ As the clock runs, you become effectively married to one lender đ Eventually, your options shrink or disappear, and switching means paying for a new appraisal and accepting whatever new value the market gives you â If youâre planning a refinance, plan around: đ´ Appraisal effective date đ´ Lenderâs recert / transfer policy đ´ Your target close date â Thatâs how you avoid getting trapped in a five-month file with no good options to get out.