TXTransplant said:
Thanks! I just posted on the RE board, too, because I figured no one was reading my posts here any more.
So, the final adjusted price is some kind of comparative estimate based on my BF's house? If so, that makes sense because he has a pool and none of the five sales comps they put in the report have a pool.
Yes. There are sheets in the back of the packets that show all of the adjustments one by one made to each sale. They adjust for construction material differences, size differences, neighborhood difference, level of remodel, grade, condition/desirability/utility, differences in bathroom counts, differences in the land value, differences in extra features values (where the pool woild be accounted for.
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I don't have a the same report for my house, and my isettle offer was more insulting than his was. I've already declined mine.
One very good comp to my house has already successfully protested to lower their value to the sales price. If my house were valued at the same $ per sq fit as this comp, I'd be happy. Is this a valid argument for me to make at my hearing? Adjusted values from other protests are fair game if they have settled and are publicly available on the HCAD website, right?
Yes, although in an informal setting the district can be difficult to work with regarding such "equal and uniform"arguments and may claim that they can only consider noticed values. A review board should consider all evidence presented to them.
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Also, how in the world can HCAD justify valuing a property at $100k over the time adjusted price (more than $100k over the actual sales price, and the house sold at the end of Nov)? I realize I'm an old woman screaming at clouds here, but this one house (that is a comp to mine) is just egregiously over-valued. It sold in Nov for $500k, time admitted value is $505k, and HCAD actually valued it at over $600k! This makes my head want to explode. It's fraud, theft, and morally and ethically bankrupt!
They cant justify it, they will end up changing that to the sales price in the blink of an eye if protested. The question is why does their model so far off on that property. I think this year there may be a fundamental flaw in their assumptions (ie that values were rising throughout 2022). If you look at the adjustments they make though, you can see where errors creep in simply because they dont have the manpower to accurately appraise every single house. They dont know the exact physical condition or desirability or even basic things like construction material and quality on every house in the County.
Lets say that theres someone who own the sweetest, nicest crib in your neighborhood, but one year he's able to cobble some misleading photos and a sob story and gets them to lower his grade and condition values to below average for the neighborhood . Then a couple years later he sells his place for the highest price ever. Because his grade and condition are lower than most of the neighborhood, HCAD will use his sale and make the rest of his neighbors even higher (because they have those as better grade and condition) even though they had it wrong, and this house was always the best.
If you're a nosy and/or friendly neighbor type just look up and down your street and then check all your neighbors remodel, grade, and cdu ratings. I bet that mostly there are many that dont make sense and a nice house will have poor ratings or vice versa.