A home appraisal is a USPAP-compliant report produced by a licensed appraiser using a documented methodology. A Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) is an informal opinion of value produced by a real estate agent as a sales tool. The two differ in legal defensibility, methodology, licensing requirements, and appropriate use cases. For courts, lenders, and high-stakes decisions, an appraisal is required or strongly preferred.
What Is a Real Estate Appraisal?
A real estate appraisal is a professional opinion of value produced by a state-licensed or state-certified appraiser. In Texas, residential appraisers must hold a license or certification from the Texas Appraiser Licensing and Certification Board (TALCB) and must produce reports that comply with the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP).
USPAP mandates that an appraisal:
- Be developed using accepted valuation methodology for the property type
- Document all data, reasoning, and analysis used to reach the value conclusion
- Be produced by someone with independence, impartiality, and objectivity
- Include a signed certification with specific declarations
- Report all known information that affects value, including negative factors
The result is a report that can be submitted as legal evidence, relied upon by lenders for mortgage underwriting, and used to resolve disputes — because the methodology is documented and the appraiser is accountable.
What Is a CMA?
A Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) is an informal valuation produced by a real estate agent or broker using MLS data. CMAs are widely used in the real estate industry for pricing discussions between agents and clients, but they carry no legal weight and follow no mandated standard.
CMAs typically include a selection of recently sold homes in the area, presented with brief information about each sale. Some agents apply rough adjustments for size, condition, or features; many do not. The CMA is designed to facilitate a pricing conversation — not to produce a legally defensible value conclusion.
There is nothing wrong with a CMA for its intended purpose. The problem arises when CMAs are used in contexts that require an appraisal — legal proceedings, lender underwriting, or high-stakes valuations where significant money depends on accuracy.
Legal and Licensing Differences
The most important difference between an appraisal and a CMA is who produces each and under what legal framework:
- Appraiser: Texas-licensed or Texas-certified by TALCB. Subject to USPAP. Subject to disciplinary action for violations. Must demonstrate independence. Cannot accept contingent fees based on value outcome.
- Real estate agent (CMA producer): Licensed by Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC). Not required to follow USPAP. Not required to demonstrate independence for CMA purposes. May have a financial interest in the transaction (listing commission).
- Legal status: A licensed appraisal can be admitted as evidence in Texas courts; a CMA generally cannot.
- Liability: Appraisers carry Errors & Omissions insurance and face professional licensing consequences for inaccurate reports. Agents face no equivalent accountability for CMA accuracy.
When Each Is Appropriate in DFW
Use a CMA when:
- You want a quick, informal sense of market value before meeting with an agent
- You are casually researching whether your neighborhood is appreciating
- You are deciding whether to even consider listing your home
- You have a real estate agent relationship and want their initial pricing perspective
Use a licensed appraisal when:
- You are involved in a divorce proceeding and need to document property value
- You are settling an estate and need a court-acceptable valuation
- You are protesting your property taxes with the appraisal review board
- You want to remove PMI and your lender requires a licensed appraisal
- You are refinancing and want to know your equity before applying
- You are listing a complex, unique, or high-value property where CMA accuracy is limited
- You are a buyer or seller in a high-stakes transaction where valuation errors could cost tens of thousands of dollars
- You are a FSBO seller without agent representation who needs a defensible price
Why CMAs Miss in DFW's Market
DFW's residential market has characteristics that make CMA accuracy particularly unreliable for non-standard situations:
- County line complexity: Many DFW communities span county lines (Trophy Club, Roanoke). Agents often miss this in comp selection.
- School district boundaries: Keller ISD vs. non-Keller ISD, Carroll ISD vs. other districts — these create measurable value differences that CMAs frequently under-adjust for.
- Wide price ranges: In markets like Southlake ($800K-$3M+), thin sales volume makes comp selection highly subjective.
- New construction adjacency: Many DFW neighborhoods have new construction nearby. Using new construction comps for resale homes without adjustment produces inflated values.
- Market timing: DFW has experienced significant price volatility since 2020. A CMA that uses 6-month-old sales in a rapidly shifting market can be substantially off.
How to Use Both Together
The most sophisticated approach for DFW sellers uses both tools. Start with an agent's CMA to understand the general range and the agent's marketing perspective. Then commission a pre-listing appraisal to get an independent, documented value with no conflict of interest. If the two are in agreement, you have strong confidence in your price. If they diverge, you have important information before you go to market.
Luke Motto at Motto Appraisal Service has provided pre-listing appraisals to hundreds of DFW sellers who used this approach. Call (817) 217-4375 to discuss your situation.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can a CMA be used in a Texas court proceeding?
Generally no. A CMA is an informal opinion from a licensed real estate agent and does not meet the evidentiary standards required for most legal proceedings, including divorce property division, probate, or estate tax disputes. Texas courts require a USPAP-compliant licensed appraisal for real property valuation evidence.
Is a real estate appraisal always more accurate than a CMA?
A properly performed appraisal from a competent appraiser is more methodologically rigorous than a CMA, but accuracy depends on the quality of both. A careless appraisal can be less accurate than a careful CMA. The key difference is that an appraisal follows a required standard (USPAP) with documented methodology, while a CMA has no mandated standard.
When should I get a CMA instead of an appraisal?
A CMA is appropriate when you want a rough sense of market value to inform a casual decision, when speed matters more than precision, or when you are exploring whether to list a home and want an agent's initial perspective. An appraisal is appropriate when you need a legally defensible value, when the stakes of an inaccurate estimate are significant, or when a lender or court requires a licensed appraisal.
Do real estate agents order appraisals?
Agents do not typically order appraisals for their clients, though some do for specific situations. Lenders order appraisals as part of mortgage underwriting. Homeowners can order their own appraisals directly for any purpose — pre-listing, divorce, estate, PMI removal, or tax protest. An appraisal ordered directly (not through a lender's AMC) is called a private appraisal.
How long does a CMA take vs. an appraisal?
A CMA can be produced in 20 minutes to a few hours. An appraisal requires a physical inspection (45-90 minutes), research, analysis, and report writing — typically delivering a completed report in 3-5 business days. The additional time reflects the additional rigor and documentation required.
Does a higher CMA from an agent mean I should price my home higher?
Not necessarily. Agents have incentive to win listings and may provide optimistic estimates. A pre-listing appraisal from an independent licensed appraiser provides a less biased data point. If the appraisal and the agent's CMA are in close agreement, that is meaningful confirmation. If they diverge significantly, understanding why is important before setting a list price.