Geographic Competency
An appraiser's knowledge of and experience with a specific market area, including familiarity with local market conditions, comparable sales, neighborhood boundaries, and value influences. Required by USPAP's Competency Rule.
Geographic competency means the appraiser understands the local market dynamics, property types, value ranges, and external factors affecting the area. An appraiser from North Jersey may lack geographic competency for assignments in South Jersey shore communities, even though both are in New Jersey. If an appraiser accepts an assignment in an unfamiliar area, they must disclose this and take steps to gain competency (additional market research, consultation with local appraisers, etc.). GSEs and many lenders have specific geographic competency requirements, often requiring the appraiser to be located within a certain distance of the subject.
Related Terms
Competency Rule
A USPAP rule requiring that an appraiser must have the knowledge and experience necessary to complete an assignment competently, or must take steps to acquire it before accepting the assignment..
Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP)
USPAPThe nationally recognized ethical and performance standards for the appraisal profession, established by The Appraisal Foundation.
Neighborhood Analysis
The appraiser's evaluation of the area surrounding the subject property, including property values, market trends, land use, demographics, and external factors that influence value.
Market Conditions
The current state of supply and demand in the real estate market for a particular property type in a defined area.
More in Legal & Regulatory
View allFIRREA (Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act)
FIRREAThe 1989 federal law that established the modern appraisal regulatory framework, requiring state licensing of appraisers and USPAP compliance for all federally related real estate transactions..
Dodd-Frank Act (Appraisal Provisions)
The 2010 federal financial reform law that included significant appraisal provisions: appraiser independence requirements, AMC registration, customary and reasonable fee mandates, and prohibition of BPOs for origination..
Appraiser Independence
The legal requirement that appraisers must be free from improper influence, coercion, or pressure from parties with a financial interest in the transaction outcome.
USPAP Ethics Rule
The USPAP rule establishing requirements for appraiser conduct, management, confidentiality, and record keeping.