Practice questions · Real Estate Appraiser

Real Estate Appraiser Practice Questions

Free Real Estate Appraiser practice questions with answers and plain-English explanations. Browse the PDF, video and online mock test.

Free sample · Real Estate AppraiserQ1
The cost approach to value is based on the principle that a buyer will pay no more for a property than the cost to:
Correct — A. The cost approach rests on the substitution principle: a rational buyer will pay no more than the cost to acquire a comparable site and build an equally desirable improvement. This sets an upper limit on value.
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Real Estate Appraiser Questions

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  1. Q1The cost approach to value is based on the principle that a buyer will pay no more for a property than the cost to:

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    ✓ Correct answer: Acquire an equivalent substitute site and construct an equally desirable improvement

    The cost approach rests on the substitution principle: a rational buyer will pay no more than the cost to acquire a comparable site and build an equally desirable improvement. This sets an upper limit on value.

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  2. Q2Which type of property is the cost approach MOST applicable to appraise?

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    ✓ Correct answer: Special-purpose properties such as schools, churches, or public buildings

    The cost approach is most reliable for special-purpose or unique properties (schools, churches, government buildings) because there are few comparable sales or rental data from which to develop the sales comparison or income approaches.

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  3. Q3The basic formula for the cost approach is:

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    ✓ Correct answer: Land value + Depreciated cost of improvements

    The cost approach value indicator equals land value (as if vacant) plus the depreciated cost of improvements. Depreciated cost equals cost new minus accrued depreciation.

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  4. Q4In the cost approach, why is land always valued as if vacant and available for its highest and best use?

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    ✓ Correct answer: Because land value must reflect its potential without the existing improvement so that depreciation can be applied only to the building

    Land is valued separately as though vacant so that all accrued depreciation can be properly identified and deducted from the improvement cost. Combining land and building would make it impossible to isolate building depreciation.

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  5. Q5Reproduction cost is defined as the cost to create:

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    ✓ Correct answer: An exact replica of the subject improvement using the same materials, design, and construction quality

    Reproduction cost is the cost to replicate the subject improvement exactly — same materials, workmanship, design, and layout — at current prices. It differs from replacement cost, which uses modern materials and standards.

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  6. Q6Replacement cost is defined as the cost to construct:

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    ✓ Correct answer: A building of equal utility using modern materials, design, and construction standards

    Replacement cost is the cost to build a building of equal utility using current materials, methods, and standards — not an exact replica. This is the most commonly used cost basis in appraisal.

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  7. Q7An appraiser is valuing a historic Victorian mansion with ornate plaster ceilings that would be prohibitively expensive to replicate today. Which cost basis would MOST accurately capture functional obsolescence built into the original design?

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    ✓ Correct answer: Reproduction cost, because it includes the cost of the obsolete features that can then be deducted as depreciation

    Using reproduction cost for historic or architecturally unique buildings captures the cost of obsolete features; those same features are then deducted as functional obsolescence, resulting in a cleaner reconciliation of value.

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  8. Q8When an appraiser uses replacement cost instead of reproduction cost, which form of depreciation is automatically eliminated from the analysis?

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    ✓ Correct answer: Functional obsolescence attributable to the use of outmoded or superadequate materials in the original construction

    Replacement cost is based on a modern equivalent building, so any obsolescence caused by using outdated or superadequate original materials is already excluded from the cost estimate — it does not need to be separately deducted as functional obsolescence.

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  9. Q9Which of the following is an example of a DIRECT (hard) cost of construction?

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    ✓ Correct answer: Labor and materials used to frame the building

    Direct (hard) costs are the physical costs of construction — labor, materials, and equipment. Architect fees, loan interest, and developer's profit are indirect (soft) costs.

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  10. Q10Which of the following is an example of an INDIRECT (soft) cost of construction?

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    ✓ Correct answer: Construction loan interest paid during the building period

    Indirect (soft) costs are costs not directly related to physical construction, such as financing costs (loan interest), architectural/engineering fees, permit fees, marketing, and developer's overhead.

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