Tax authorities do not take a homeowner's word for what a property is worth, and they should not have to. Whether you believe your assessed value overshoots the market or you need to document the value of a gifted property, an independent appraisal supplies the evidence the process expects.

Assessment Appeals
An Assessment Appeals Board hearing turns on evidence, and a printout from a real-estate website is not evidence. I value the property as of the lien date that governs the appeal, assemble the comparable sales that actually support the position, and organize the exhibit so the board can follow it in the few minutes your hearing will last. Where the assessment is defensible, I will tell you that too, before you spend money pursuing it.
Gift and Transfer Taxes
Real estate given away, or transferred at less than arm's length, gets reported at fair market value as of the transfer date. That is a retrospective valuation, and the IRS treats a thin one as an invitation. A documented appraisal fixes the number at the correct date and gives the return something to stand on.
Lien Dates and Retrospective Work
Tax valuation is rarely about today. Lien dates, transfer dates, and alternate valuation dates each require reconstructing the market as it existed then, using sales that closed around that time. That research is what separates a report the authority accepts from one it ignores.
Fees
Tax appraisals are quoted by report type and complexity. Retrospective lien-date research adds work and can affect the fee; you will hear that from me before you commit, not after.
Request This Appraisal
Published fees begin at $299, and your exact fee is confirmed before you commit. Review the full fee schedule or request a free quote.