What Sellers in Toronto Should Know About Low Appraisals
When a buyer finances a home purchase, their lender typically requires an independent appraisal before the loan is approved. If the appraised value matches or exceeds the contract price, the transaction moves forward. If it comes in below the contract price, the difference between what the lender will finance and what the buyer agreed to pay needs to be resolved before closing. That gap is commonly referred to as an appraisal gap.
A low appraisal doesn't automatically end a transaction. Sellers typically have several options for responding, and the right path depends on the contract terms, the size of the gap, and how both parties choose to proceed. Here in Toronto, understanding those options ahead of time can make the conversation far more straightforward if it comes up.
What the Appraisal Process Is Measuring
The appraiser is engaged by the buyer's lender and operates independently. Their job is to assess the property's fair market value based on its condition, features, and recent comparable sales in the area. That value is then used to determine the maximum loan amount the lender will approve.
Appraisers are evaluating data, not the negotiated price. The agreed price between two parties doesn't factor into the appraiser's methodology. The report reflects market evidence as the appraiser interprets it, which is why the appraised value and the contract price sometimes don't match.
For sellers, this distinction matters. The price you and the buyer agreed to may reflect strong demand, unique features, or timing. The appraisal focuses on documented sales and measurable characteristics. When those two perspectives line up, the process feels seamless. When they differ, it becomes a question of how to bridge the gap.
Why Appraisals Come In Below Contract Price
Several factors can contribute to an appraisal that falls short of the agreed price. In competitive markets, offer prices are sometimes driven above the range that recent comparable sales can support. Because appraisals rely on completed transactions, which may be weeks or months old, there's an inherent lag between current market activity and the data available to appraisers.
Limited comparable sales in the immediate area can also affect the outcome. When few properties of similar size, condition, and type have sold recently, the appraiser has less data to draw from. Properties with distinctive features, significant lot characteristics, or recent improvements not yet reflected in area sales can be more difficult to value accurately.
In some cases, an appraiser working outside their primary area of expertise may not capture neighborhood-specific value drivers that a local agent would recognize. This doesn't necessarily mean the report is wrong, but it can be a basis for requesting additional review.
It also helps to remember that an appraisal is a snapshot in time. If the market has been shifting or if buyer activity has changed recently, the most relevant comparable sales may not fully reflect current sentiment. That doesn't invalidate the report, but it can explain why the contract price and appraised value don't align.
Options Available to Sellers
Once a low appraisal is received, there are four primary paths forward.
The buyer can cover the gap. If the buyer has the financial capacity and wants to proceed, they can pay the difference between the appraised value and the contract price out of pocket. This is most common when the gap is relatively small or when the buyer has already agreed in the contract to proceed regardless of the appraised value.
The seller can reduce the contract price to match the appraised value. This keeps the deal intact at a lower sale price. Whether this makes sense depends on the seller's goals, current market conditions, and how the price reduction compares to the cost and uncertainty of relisting. For some sellers, certainty and timing matter more than holding firm on price. For others, testing the market again may be worth considering.
Both parties can split the gap. The seller reduces the price by a portion of the difference, and the buyer covers the remainder in cash. This is often the most workable outcome when neither party wants to absorb the full amount. It keeps both sides invested in reaching the finish line.
The seller can ask for the appraisal to be reviewed. If the report contains factual errors, overlooked comparable sales, or properties that are a poor match for the subject home, the listing agent can request that the appraiser reconsider the value based on additional evidence. This request typically goes through the buyer's lender and must include documented support, usually in the form of stronger comparables. It doesn't guarantee a revised value, but it's worth pursuing when the evidence is credible.
If none of these paths produce an agreement, and the contract includes a condition that allows the buyer to exit based on financing or appraised value, either party may have grounds to terminate the transaction. How that works in practice depends on the specific contract language and local rules, which is where your agent's knowledge of the market becomes particularly important.
How Contract Terms Affect the Outcome
Purchase agreements typically include conditions that define each party's position if the appraisal falls short. If the buyer's contract includes a financing or appraisal condition, they may have the right to renegotiate or exit the deal if the appraised value doesn't support the purchase price. If the buyer has waived that condition, they've already agreed to proceed regardless of the appraised value, and the seller's position is considerably stronger.
In markets where multiple offers are common, buyers sometimes remove conditions to make their offers more competitive. Sellers should understand what conditions are present before accepting an offer, because it determines how the conversation unfolds if the numbers don't align later. A careful review of the offer up front gives you more clarity and fewer surprises after the appraisal is delivered.
When to Ask for a Second Look
Requesting a review of the appraisal isn't an appeal or a challenge to the appraiser's judgment. It's a request to consider data that may not have been included in the original report. The strongest basis for this includes comparable sales that are more recent or more similar to the subject property than the ones used, or corrections to factual errors in the report such as incorrect square footage or room count.
A listing agent familiar with the local market can often identify comparables the appraiser didn't use and present that evidence effectively. Not every review results in a revised value, and when the original report is well-supported, the outcome may not change. The decision to pursue one should be based on the quality of the available evidence.
Before requesting a review, it's worth reading the report in detail. Confirm the basic property information is accurate, look at the comparables selected, and assess how closely they match your home in size, condition, and features. A focused, evidence-based response carries more weight than a general objection.
Making a Decision
The most effective response to a low appraisal is a data-based one. Before agreeing to any adjustment or counter-proposal, review the appraisal report carefully, assess the comparable sales the appraiser used, and determine whether a review request is supported by the evidence. The size of the gap, the strength of the underlying comparables, and current local market conditions all factor into which option makes the most sense.
Most appraisal gaps are resolved without the deal falling apart. The path forward is usually clearer once the options are laid out and the contract terms are understood.
If you're preparing to sell, we can walk you through what to expect at each stage, including how to handle it if the appraisal comes in below your contract price. Reach out any time.
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