Reconciliation & Final Value: How the Appraiser Reaches a Conclusion

After completing the inspection, collecting market data, and applying appropriate valuation methods, the final step in any residential appraisal is reconciliation. This is where the appraiser reviews all conclusions and determines the final opinion of value.
At Jeff Pennini Appraisals, I take this final step seriously. It’s where all of the appraisal’s research, analysis, and judgment come together to produce a number that can be relied on—for lending, legal, or personal decision-making.

At Jeff Pennini Appraisals, I apply the Income Approach when it’s the most appropriate way to estimate value. This is typically for 2–4 unit multifamily homes, rental condos, and properties purchased or held for investment purposes.

What Is Reconciliation in an Appraisal?

Reconciliation is the process of analyzing the results from the different approaches to value—Sales Comparison, Cost, and (when applicable) Income—and then determining which method is the most reliable for the subject property.

It also involves weighing the comparables, evaluating data quality, and making a final decision that reflects both the property’s characteristics and current market trends.

Steps in the Reconciliation Process

Here’s how I reconcile the data when finalizing your appraisal:

Review Results from Each Valuation Method

If multiple approaches were used, I compare their outcomes:

Sales Comparison Approach (most common)
Cost Approach (used for new or unique homes)
Income Approach (used for rentals)

Each method may produce a slightly different value estimate.

Determine the Most Applicable Approach

I identify which approach provides the most reliable result for this particular property and purpose. For most single-family homes, this is the Sales Comparison Approach.

In some cases, such as new construction or income properties, the Cost or Income Approach may carry more weight.

Weight the Comparables

I evaluate the quality of each comparable sale used in the Sales Comparison Approach. If one comp is nearly identical to the subject, it may be given more weight than others.

Factors I consider:

  • Location similarity
  • Recency of sale
  • Condition and features
  • Number of adjustments required

Reconcile into a Single Value Conclusion

Using professional judgment, I finalize the opinion of market value. This is not an average of the approaches or comps—it’s a reasoned conclusion based on the most credible data.

Why Reconciliation Matters

Without proper reconciliation, an appraisal wouldn’t be defensible. The reconciliation process ensures that:

  • The valuation is based on the best available data
  • One flawed comp doesn’t skew the result
  • The report is credible and reliable for its intended use
  • Clients have a clear, supported number to work from

This is also where experience comes into play. With over 20 years of appraisal work in Massachusetts, I’ve developed the judgment to reconcile data fairly and confidently.

What You’ll See in the Report

The final section of your appraisal will clearly state:

  • Which approach(es) were used
  • Which approach was weighted most heavily and why
  • A single final value conclusion (rounded to the nearest $100 or $500)
  • Comments supporting that conclusion based on the inspection and data analysis

 

This final value is what banks, attorneys, and courts rely on for decision-making.

Example of Reconciliation (Hypothetical)

Let’s say:

  • Sales Comparison Approach = $510,000
  • Cost Approach = $495,000
  • Income Approach = Not applicable

 

If the Sales Comparison Approach is most relevant and the data is strong, I may reconcile the final value at $510,000 with full justification provided in the report.

If one comp was a stronger indicator than the others, that also factors into the final reconciliation.

Trusted Appraisal Services in Southeastern Massachusetts

Whether you’re in Hanson, Plymouth, Quincy, Brockton, or Bridgewater, I bring local knowledge and proven methodology to every appraisal. My final value conclusions are independent, well-documented, and accepted by banks, attorneys, and courts across the region.

If you’re ready to schedule a certified residential appraisal or just want to better understand the process, I’m here to help.