Why Every Realtor Should Care About One of the Most Overlooked Advantages in Today's Mortgage Market
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
What Is an Appraisal Waiver?
For eligible conventional loans, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may determine that they already have enough confidence in a property's value to eliminate the need for a traditional appraisal.
Instead of sending an appraiser to the property, their automated collateral systems evaluate historical appraisal data, public records, market information, and proprietary valuation models to determine whether a traditional appraisal is necessary.
When an appraisal waiver is offered, buyers may save hundreds of dollars while removing one of the most common causes of closing delays.
Not every borrower qualifies.
Not every property qualifies.
But when one does...

Everyone wins.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Why Realtors Should Care
Every Realtor has experienced it. Everything is going perfectly...
Until the appraisal arrives. The value is below the contract price. Negotiations begin. Closing dates move. Tempers rise. Sometimes the deal falls apart completely.
A true appraisal waiver eliminates that particular risk because there is no traditional appraisal to dispute.

It doesn't guarantee every transaction closes—but it removes one of the largest variables that can derail an otherwise great deal.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Here's What Most Realtors Don't Know
Many people assume appraisal waivers are automatic.
They aren't.
Many assume every lender handles them the same way.
They don't.
And many assume every loan officer is checking every available option.
Unfortunately...

That's not always the case.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
There Isn't Just One Appraisal Waiver System
One of the biggest misconceptions in the mortgage industry is that there's a single appraisal waiver database.
There isn't.
Fannie Mae has its own automated underwriting system.
Freddie Mac has its own automated underwriting system.
Each uses its own collateral database and valuation technology.
That means one agency may offer an appraisal waiver while the other may not.

That's why it's important to fully evaluate the available ALL options before assuming an appraisal is required.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Not Every Lender Approaches Appraisal Waivers the Same Way
Even when an appraisal waiver is available, not every lender will use it.
Some banks and depository institutions maintain internal lending policies that are more conservative than the underlying agency guidelines. In some situations, they may still require a traditional appraisal even when another lender is comfortable accepting the waiver.
Some lenders may only allow their loan officers to pull use Fannie Mae. Some may only allow Freddie Mac. This means that lender has not done the full due diligence to verify if an appraisal waiver is available.
That's one of the advantages of working with an independent mortgage broker.
Instead of being limited to a single institution's policies, brokers have access to multiple wholesale lenders. That flexibility often allows us to identify financing solutions that may not be available through a single lender.
No one can promise an appraisal waiver.

But working with a loan officer who understands the process—and has access to multiple lending partners—can make a meaningful difference.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Experience Still Matters
No loan officer can create an appraisal waiver.
Only Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac can offer one.
But experienced loan officers know that the first approval isn't always the final answer.
Sometimes a different loan structure produces a different collateral decision.
Sometimes one agency sees something the other doesn't.
Sometimes small details matter more than people realize.
The best loan officers don't simply submit loans.
They analyze them. They ask questions. They look for opportunities.

Because sometimes one extra step can save a buyer hundreds of dollars and remove one of the biggest risks in the transaction.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Why This Matters More Than Ever
Appraisal waivers have expanded significantly in recent years.
Fannie Mae's expansion of appraisal waiver eligibility to certain purchase loans with loan-to-value ratios between 80% and 90% has opened the door for many more buyers than just a few years ago. One factor many buyers and even some loan officers don’t realize is that something as simple as increasing the down payment can be the difference in allowing an appraisal waiver.
Did you know, many borrowers still complete traditional appraisals when other valuation options may be available. A 2022 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that regulated lenders obtained traditional appraisals on approximately 85% of mortgages that qualified for a federal appraisal exemption, illustrating that lender policies and practices—not just borrower eligibility—can influence whether alternatives to traditional appraisals are actually used.
That's why choosing the right lending partner matters.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
Five Questions Every Realtor Should Ask Their Loan Officer
When your next conventional buyer writes an offer, ask these questions:
1. Did you run both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac?
2. Did either agency offer an appraisal waiver?
3. If not, did you explore different financing structures?
4. Is there another lending option that could improve the collateral findings?
5. Did you stop at the first approval—or did you continue looking for opportunities to make the transaction even better?
Those five questions may save your client time, money, and unnecessary stress
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
This Is Only the Beginning
Appraisal waivers are only one piece of the mortgage industry's modernization.
In my next article, we'll explore two programs that many Realtors have heard mentioned—but very few fully understand:
- Value Acceptance + Property Data (VA+PD)
- ACE + Property Data Report (ACE+PDR)
Are they replacements for appraisals?
Are they as good as appraisal waivers?
Why are some lenders embracing them while others aren't?
We'll answer those questions next.
Imagine calling your buyer with this news:
"Great news—we don't need an appraisal."
No waiting for an appraiser's schedule.
No anxious week wondering whether the home will appraise for the contract price.
No last-minute negotiations because the value came in low.
Just one less obstacle between an accepted offer and the closing table.
For buyers, it's one of the biggest hidden advantages in mortgage lending today. Most stop at the obvious benefit—saving the $600-$900 appraisal fee.
For Realtors, the benefits run much deeper. It includes smoother transactions, happier clients, and fewer surprises.
But the biggest benefit is often something else entirely.
When a traditional appraisal is removed from the equation, the transaction can often move forward much sooner. With one major contingency eliminated, lenders can move more confidently through underwriting. Inspections often become the primary milestone, and title companies can begin the deeper work needed to prepare for closing instead of waiting for the appraisal to be completed.
How many transactions have been delayed because a title issue surfaced only a few days before closing - A lien, an old mortgage release, a probate issue, an heirship problem, a survey question.
Those issues don't get easier because they're discovered later. The sooner they're found, the sooner they're solved.
Yet many appraisal waivers are still overlooked—not because buyers don't qualify, but because many loan officers simply don't look for them. An appraisal waiver doesn't just eliminate an appraisal. It can eliminate the snowball effect, where one delay pushes back the next, and the next, until everyone is scrambling the week before closing.
The Bottom Line
The best loan officers don't just look for approvals.
They look for opportunities.
Opportunities to save buyers money.
Opportunities to eliminate unnecessary delays.
Opportunities to avoid unnecessary appraisals.
Opportunities to create smoother closings.
Because sometimes the best mortgage isn't simply the one with the lowest interest rate.
It's the one that gives everyone the best chance of getting to the closing table with confidence.

If you're a Realtor who wants a lending partner that looks beyond the obvious and explores every reasonable opportunity for your clients, I'd love to have that conversation.
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