Common Trigger
Family-property or marital-home questions where communication expectations need to be clear before scheduling.
Divorce Appraisals
Divorce and family property matters need careful intake because the appraisal may be used by private parties, attorneys, mediators, or a court process. The request should clearly explain the property, intended use, timing, and who should be part of follow-up.
Common Trigger
Family-property or marital-home questions where communication expectations need to be clear before scheduling.
Best First Step
Identify whether private parties, attorneys, mediators, or court-related contacts need follow-up.
What Speeds Review
Access expectations, timing limits, known condition issues, and the preferred contact path.
Divorce appraisal timing can depend on access coordination, required effective date, property complexity, communication requirements, and whether multiple parties or representatives need to be kept in the loop. Clear contact instructions make the first review much easier.
An appraisal can support a value discussion, but it does not provide legal advice or decide a legal outcome. Confirm any court or attorney requirements before ordering.
Before You Submit
Gather the address, access instructions, property notes, and timing details before you request a quote.
Frequently Asked
A private party can submit a request, but the intended use and any attorney or court expectations should be discussed before moving forward.
Yes. Add the attorney or professional contact details in the request notes if they should be part of follow-up.
Include the preferred access contact and any scheduling limitations. Those details can be addressed before an appointment is set.