Due Diligence

Fair Market Value (FMV)

The price a property would sell for between a willing buyer and seller; it anchors the equity cushion behind a note and the math in foreclosure.

Fair market value (FMV) is the price a property would sell for in an open-market transaction between a willing, informed buyer and a willing, informed seller, neither under pressure to act. It is the standard definition of "what a property is really worth," and it underpins note buying in two ways: it sets the equity cushion behind a note (through LTV/ITV), and it figures into the math of deficiency and recovery if a note ever goes to foreclosure.

How FMV is established

Because there is no single "true" number, FMV is estimated using one or more methods a note buyer relies on during due diligence:

  • Comparable sales — recent sales of similar nearby properties, the most common basis
  • Broker price opinion (BPO) — a real estate broker's value estimate
  • Appraisal — a licensed appraiser's formal opinion to a regulated standard
  • Automated valuation model (AVM) — a data-driven software estimate

Buyers often discount FMV for condition or to a quick-sale value when modeling a default scenario, since a forced sale rarely brings full retail FMV.

Why FMV anchors note value

The note's protection comes from the property, so FMV is the denominator in every cushion calculation:

  • LTV = loan ÷ FMV and ITV = price ÷ FMV — the lower these are, the safer the note.
  • The equity behind the note is FMV minus the debt.
  • In a non-performing note, the likely recovery is FMV (adjusted for condition and a quick sale) minus foreclosure and selling costs.

An accurate FMV is therefore essential to pricing a note correctly. An inflated value overstates the cushion; a conservative value protects the buyer.

FMV in foreclosure and deficiency math

Many states require that a deficiency be measured against the property's fair market value rather than a low auction price (a fair-value offset), protecting borrowers from lenders bidding artificially low at the trustee sale. So FMV is not just a pricing input — it can be a legal benchmark in recovery.

FMV vs. assessed value vs. payoff

Three numbers often confused:

  • FMV: what the property would actually sell for on the open market.
  • Tax-assessed value: the county's figure for taxation, often not equal to FMV.
  • Payoff: what the borrower owes on the loan — about the debt, not the property's worth.

What it means when you sell

Providing evidence of an accurate, favorable FMV is one of the most effective ways to support a strong offer. Share a recent appraisal, BPO, comparable sales, or even a credible tax/market value, plus honest detail on condition and upgrades. The buyer will confirm value during diligence, but a well-documented FMV reduces uncertainty and helps your price hold. Our note value calculator uses property value alongside the payment terms to estimate your note's worth.

Questions about fair market value (fmv)

How is fair market value determined for my note's property?

Through comparable sales, a broker price opinion (BPO), a formal appraisal, or an automated valuation model. Buyers often adjust FMV for condition or to a quick-sale value when modeling a default scenario, since a forced sale rarely brings full retail value.

Is fair market value the same as the tax-assessed value?

Usually not. The tax-assessed value is the county's figure for taxation and often differs from what a property would actually sell for. Fair market value is the open-market price between a willing buyer and seller, which is what anchors the equity cushion behind a note.

Selling a note with these terms?

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