It is a dynamic that costs Gawler vendors money on a regular basis - and the frustrating part is that it is entirely avoidable once you understand the incentive structure behind it. The agent who inflates an appraisal is not making a mistake. They are making a calculated decision. Understanding that changes how you approach every appraisal you receive.
Why Inflated Appraisals Are So Common
Here is the mechanism in plain terms. Agent A quotes the market honestly at $680,000 - $720,000. Agent B quotes $760,000 - $790,000. The vendor signs with Agent B. The campaign launches at $775,000. Three weeks in, buyer feedback is consistently referencing value. By week five, the price drops to $720,000. The listing is now sitting at where it should have launched, with five weeks of days-on-market history telling every new buyer that the vendor needed to move. Agent B won the listing. The vendor paid for it.
Vendors are not irrational for responding to a higher number. It is entirely understandable. The problem is that the number was never a market assessment - it was a sales tool. Once signed, the vendor is committed to a campaign built around a price the buyer pool has no obligation to meet. In suburbs like Gawler East, Hewett and the surrounding corridor, where comparable sales are visible and buyers are well-researched, an inflated asking price does not take long to expose itself.
What Happens After You Sign With the Wrong Agent
The vendor who chose based on the highest appraisal often ends up in the worst negotiating position of anyone in the campaign. They have a stale listing, a reduced price, and a buyer who knows exactly how long the property has been on the market and exactly what that means for the conversation they are about to have.
How to Read an Appraisal Critically
Ask for the evidence before you accept any number. Request the specific settled results that support the price. A credible agent will have no difficulty walking you through them. If the comparables are thin, cherry-picked or from a different suburb entirely, the appraisal is telling you something - and what it is telling you is not about the property.
Vendors who take the time to research helpful vendor advice before they invite a single agent through tend to ask far better questions during the appraisal process.
Choosing the Right Agent for Your Situation
Get three appraisals. Compare the evidence behind each one. Look at the supporting comparable sales, the list-to-sale ratios and the recent local results. Then choose the agent whose market knowledge is most credible - not the one whose number was most appealing. The vendor who makes that distinction tends to run a very different campaign to the one who does not.
Things Sellers Want to Know Before Signing
How do I know if an appraisal is inflated
Look at the spread. If two agents quote within a similar range and one quotes significantly higher, the outlier almost certainly inflated. Not always - sometimes an agent genuinely identifies something others missed. But when the gap between the highest and the consensus is large and the supporting evidence is thin, the explanation is usually straightforward: the high figure was designed to win the listing, not to reflect the market.
What happens if my agent promised a price they cannot deliver
Read the agreement before you sign it. Cooling-off periods, notice periods and performance clauses vary. If the agent overquoted materially and the campaign has demonstrably failed to generate the activity a correctly priced listing would have produced, the conversation about early exit is worth having. Most agents would rather part professionally than face a formal dispute process - but you need to understand your position before you have that conversation.
Does getting more appraisals help or just create confusion
Three appraisals is the right number for most vendors. It gives you enough data to identify patterns and outliers without turning the selection process into a full-time job. With three figures you can see where the evidence clusters, identify any outlier that stands well clear of the others, and make a comparison that is genuinely useful rather than overwhelming. More than three tends to add noise rather than clarity.
How do I choose an agent based on more than just the number they give me
Beyond results, look at how they handle scrutiny. Ask a hard question during the appraisal and watch what happens. Do they engage with it directly, or do they deflect and return to their prepared points? An agent who can handle a direct question in a low-stakes presentation will handle a difficult buyer conversation in a live negotiation. One who cannot will struggle with both.