Estate & Date of Death Appraisals in San Diego County
We provide USPAP-compliant Retrospectice residential appraisals for estate settlement, trust administration, and tax reporting purposes throughout San Diego County.
What Is a Date-of-Death Appraisal?
A date-of-death appraisal determines the fair market value of real property as of a specific historical date. These retrospective valuations are commonly required for estate settlement, stepped-up basis calculations, trust administration, and federal tax reporting.
Why an Independent Date-of-Death Appraisal Is Legally Protective
A retrospective appraisal establishing fair market value as of the date of death serves an essential fiduciary and legal function in estate administration.
Executors and trustees have a duty to act prudently and impartially. When determining property value for distribution, buyouts, or tax reporting, reliance on informal estimates, automated valuation models (AVMs), online price opinions, or listing-oriented market analyses will not provide adequate documentation or defensible support if the valuation is later questioned.
While online estimates and comparative market analyses may offer general market insight, they are not developed under the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP), do not provide a formal retrospective analysis of market conditions as of a specific historical date, and are not intended to withstand scrutiny in tax, audit, or court proceedings.
In estate matters, a certified real estate appraisal represents the gold standard for establishing fair market value — particularly for retrospective date-of-death valuations.
Automated valuation models (such as Zillow or other online platforms) and broker price opinions are not appraisal reports and are not developed under professional appraisal standards. They are designed for marketing purposes, not for legal or tax documentation.
When filing estate tax returns, settling trusts, or distributing assets among heirs, reliance on informal valuation methods can increase the risk of audit, dispute, or litigation. A certified appraisal provides a fully documented, USPAP-compliant analysis prepared by a state-licensed professional specifically trained in retrospective valuation methodology.
A state-licensed, USPAP-compliant appraisal:
• Establishes a documented opinion of fair market value as of the specific date of death
• Analyzes comparable sales within the relevant historical market context
• Provides a written report detailing methodology and supporting data
• Creates a defensible record in the event of IRS review, court inquiry, or beneficiary dispute
In contested estates, unsupported valuation methods can expose fiduciaries to allegations of undervaluation, overvaluation, or preferential treatment. An independent appraisal demonstrates that reasonable and prudent steps were taken to protect all parties involved.
For federal tax purposes, the date-of-death value establishes the stepped-up cost basis for beneficiaries. Unsupported or undocumented values can create capital gains complications or audit risk years after the estate has closed.
Real estate agents provide valuable services in marketing and facilitating property sales. However, unless separately licensed as appraisers, they are not authorized to develop USPAP-compliant appraisal reports or issue formal retrospective date-of-death appraisals for estate tax or legal purposes.
Estate appraisals require a certified real estate appraiser trained in developing credible, well-supported retrospective valuations designed to withstand IRS review, court proceedings, and legal scrutiny.
If the goal is to reduce scrutiny, protect beneficiaries, and ensure defensible reporting, a formal appraisal is not merely helpful — it is the appropriate and necessary standard. An independent appraisal is not simply a valuation — it is a safeguard for the executor, the beneficiaries, and the integrity of the estate process.
Who Requests Estate Appraisals?
• Executors and personal representatives
• Trustees
• Probate and estate attorneys
• CPAs and tax professionals
• Heirs and beneficiaries
What You Receive
• USPAP-compliant retrospective valuation
• Comprehensive market analysis supporting the value conclusion
• Defensible documentation for estate and tax reporting
• Clear communication throughout the process
• Timely delivery
Request an Estate Appraisal
If you are administering an estate or require a retrospective valuation, we welcome your inquiry.