Appraisal Review

The lender-side check of a completed appraisal to confirm the report is usable, internally consistent, and fit for the mortgage decision.

Appraisal review is the lender-side check of a completed appraisal to confirm the report is usable, internally consistent, and fit for the mortgage decision.

Why It Matters

Appraisal review matters because the lender does not simply receive a valuation report and move on. The report still has to make sense as a mortgage collateral document before the file can rely on it.

It also matters because borrowers often jump directly from “the appraisal came in” to “the value is final.” In practice, the lender or its workflow partners may still review the report for quality, consistency, and whether follow-up questions are needed.

Where It Appears in the Borrower Process

Borrowers encounter appraisal review after the appraisal is completed and before the value is fully accepted into underwriting.

The term becomes practical when the file appears delayed even though the inspection or appraisal report is already done, when additional valuation questions surface before closing, or when the reviewer asks about comparable selection, adjustment support, or subject-to conditions.

Appraisal Review Compared with Nearby Terms

TermWhat it answers
Appraisal ReviewIs the completed appraisal usable and consistent enough for the lender to rely on?
Desk ReviewCan the report and available data support the value without a new field inspection?
Field ReviewDoes a more direct property or market check support the report?
AppraisalWhat is the valuation process and report itself?
Appraisal ReportWhat written document is being reviewed?
Comparable Sale SelectionWere the chosen sales reasonable evidence?
Net Adjustment and Gross AdjustmentDoes the adjustment pattern need explanation?
Value ReconciliationDoes the final value follow from the evidence in the report?
Appraisal Management Company (AMC)Who may be coordinating assignment and review workflow?
Reconsideration of ValueHow can the value conclusion be challenged or revisited after concerns arise?
Appraisal GapWhat if the accepted value is lower than the contract price?

Practical Example

A buyer hears that the appraisal has been delivered but the lender is still not ready to clear the file forward. The report may still be moving through appraisal review so the lender can confirm the valuation is complete and usable before relying on it.

How It Differs From Nearby Terms

Appraisal review differs from Appraisal because the appraisal is the valuation assignment itself, while appraisal review is the lender-side checking step after the report is submitted.

It also differs from Reconsideration of Value. Appraisal review is the ordinary lender-side review path, while reconsideration of value is the narrower request to revisit the conclusion when someone believes the value may need adjustment.

It also differs from Appraisal Waiver because review checks a completed report, while a waiver means a full traditional report was not required.

Knowledge Check

  1. Why can the mortgage file still pause after the appraisal report is already finished? Because the lender may still be reviewing the completed appraisal to confirm the report is usable and consistent for underwriting.
  2. Is appraisal review the same thing as disputing the value? No. Appraisal review is the ordinary lender-side check on the report, while disputing the value is a later step such as reconsideration of value.
Revised on Saturday, May 23, 2026