What’s the difference between a bank appraisal and a market evaluation?
Bank Appraisal or Market Evaluation — Which One Determines Your Home’s Real Worth (and Why It Matters Today)?
Quick answer
A bank appraisal is a formal, lender-ordered valuation used for mortgage risk. A market evaluation (also called a comparative market analysis or CMA) is a strategic, agent-driven pricing opinion used to sell or list a home. They look similar, but they serve different goals, use different methods, and often produce different values.
What a bank appraisal is
A bank appraisal is a professional valuation ordered by a mortgage lender. The appraiser inspects the property, reviews recent closed sales, and applies standardized appraisal methods. The result is a report focused on the lender’s risk — not the best possible sale price. Keywords: home appraisal, mortgage lender appraisal, real estate appraisal.
Key facts:
- Purpose: Protect the lender’s investment.
- Method: On-site inspection + comparable closed sales.
- Report: Formal, standardized, often required for financing.

What a market evaluation (CMA) is
A market evaluation or CMA is prepared by a real estate agent to estimate what buyers will pay right now. It compares active, pending, and closed listings, analyzes market trends, and considers buyer demand. This is a marketing and pricing tool designed to get the best sale outcome. Keywords: market evaluation, CMA, comparable market analysis, market value.
Key facts:
- Purpose: Price to sell and attract buyers.
- Method: Competitive analysis, active listings, days on market, market trends.
- Report: Flexible, strategic, tuned to current demand.
Side-by-side: what changes and why it matters
- Timing: Appraisals reflect recent closed sales. CMAs weigh current competition and demand.
- Scope: Appraisals follow strict standards. CMAs use agent expertise and local market insight.
- Influence: Lenders rely on appraisals for loans. Sellers/buyers rely on CMAs to set price and negotiate.
- Outcomes: Appraisal can limit loan amount. A CMA can help you list higher or price aggressively to sell fast.
When values differ — what to do
- If an appraisal is lower than your CMA: provide upgrades, comparable sales, and repair receipts to the lender. Consider a second opinion or appraiser review.
- If the market is hot: use a CMA to price competitively and create bidding interest that can beat a conservative appraisal.
- If financing is tight: be prepared to bridge gaps with down payment or renegotiate.
Simple checklist for sellers and buyers
- Sellers: Get a CMA before listing. Use it to set a strategic price.
- Buyers: Expect an appraisal for financing. Use a CMA to decide offer strategy.
- Both: Understand these are different tools with different goals.

Bottom line
Bank appraisals protect lenders; market evaluations sell homes. Know which tool you need and use both when appropriate.
Want expert help turning a market evaluation into real sale results? Contact Tony Sousa — local market expert. Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















