Originally published: March 2026
Prepare a home for a divorce appraisal by organizing ownership and repair records, unlocking all inspection areas, correcting obvious minor defects, documenting upgrades and known damage, and deciding in advance who will attend.
Illinois property division is governed by 750 ILCS 5/503, and Whitsitt’s divorce appraisal service is built for that legal setting.
Whitsitt & Associates helps Illinois homeowners prepare for divorce-related valuation decisions with local market knowledge, neutral analysis, and court-aware reporting.
Homeowners who need a defensible value conclusion should start with a Champaign appraisal or submit a request appraisal before incomplete records or access problems weaken the process.
| Type | Main Purpose | Main User |
| Divorce appraisal | Property division | Spouses, attorneys, and the court |
| Refinance appraisal | Loan underwriting | Lender, borrower |
| Listing opinion or CMA | Pricing strategy | Seller, agent |
A divorce appraisal is a real estate valuation prepared for the division of marital property. A divorce appraisal is not a mortgage underwriting report and is not a sales tool.
Preparation matters because divorce cases often involve disputed facts, attorney review, and financial negotiation, so the appraiser needs clear access, accurate property data, and complete records.
Illinois courts divide marital property in just proportions under 750 ILCS 5/503. A reliable home valuation becomes important when a marital residence, buyout proposal, or equity dispute is part of the case.
Whitsitt’s property valuation in divorce and Illinois divorce property valuation resources position the appraisal as a tool of evidence for equitable division.
A refinance appraisal and a divorce appraisal may use similar valuation methods, but their intended uses differ. A lender may still require a separate underwriting appraisal after a divorce appraisal is completed.
The Appraisal Foundation identifies USPAP as the generally recognized ethical and performance standard for U.S. appraisal practice, which is why a divorce appraisal must be credible under professional and legal scrutiny.
| Valuation Type | Primary Use | Main Audience | Key Risk if Misused |
| Divorce appraisal | Marital property division | Spouses, attorneys, and the court | Settlement based on weak value evidence |
| Refinance appraisal | Mortgage underwriting | Lender, borrower | Loan terms based on incomplete value support |
| CMA or listing opinion | Pricing strategy | Seller, agent | Informal estimate treated like a formal appraisal |
A neutral, fair property appraisal provides both spouses with the same market evidence, so they can negotiate on facts rather than assumptions.
Whitsitt & Associates helps Illinois homeowners prepare for neutral, defensible divorce valuations. Request your appraisal early, so records, access, and timing do not complicate settlement planning.
A strong divorce-appraisal file is short, organized, and easy to verify. The appraiser needs records that confirm property identity, show major improvements, and explain defects or unusual conditions that may affect market value.
Start with the core property file. The core property file should include the current property tax bill, mortgage statement, deed, if available, survey or plat, if available, prior appraisal, if relevant, and major insurance or repair documentation tied to the property.
Illinois homeowners in active divorce cases can review the Illinois Courts divorce, child support, and maintenance forms, as well as the Illinois Financial Affidavit forms, to understand the broader disclosure process.
The improvement file matters just as much. A dated renovation list, plus permits, invoices, inspection sign-offs, and contractor receipts, helps the appraiser distinguish between cosmetic work and value-relevant upgrades.
A defect file can be equally important. Foundation invoices, roof-leak reports, mold-remediation records, storm-damage claims, and water-intrusion repairs may affect the condition analysis and comparable-sale adjustments.
| Document | Why It Matters in a Divorce Appraisal | Priority |
| Property tax bill | Confirms baseline property record data | High |
| Mortgage statement | Frames, equity, and payoff context | Medium |
| Deed or ownership record | Clarifies title and legal property identity | High |
| Prior appraisal | Adds historical valuation context | Medium |
| Improvement list | Verifies upgrades, timing, and scope | High |
| Permits and invoices | Supports legality and quality of work | High |
| Damage and repair records | Clarifies unresolved condition disputes | High |
| Survey or plat | Explains lot lines or site issues | Medium |
Whitsitt’s property appraiser questions and residential appraisal checklist are strong supporting reads when you want to tighten your file before the appointment.
Physical preparation for a divorce appraisal has one goal: to make the property easy to inspect accurately. Physical preparation should improve access, visibility, and the honest documentation of the condition.
Start with visible maintenance items. Replace burned-out light bulbs. Tighten loose handrails. Fix dripping faucets. Clear clutter from floors, utility rooms, basement paths, and garage walls.
A visible maintenance pattern affects presentation, even though the appraiser still relies on market evidence and comparable sales rather than aesthetics alone.
Access is often the most overlooked issue. Unlock attics, crawl spaces, utility rooms, detached garages, sheds, and finished additions before the appointment begins.
If one spouse moved out and the house is partially vacant, make sure the utilities are on and the major systems are accessible.
Do not hide defects. Water staining, unfinished repairs, damaged flooring, exposed wiring, broken windows, and known foundation concerns should be disclosed and documented. A credible appraisal depends on accurate condition data, not selective presentation.
Homeowners who want a broader residential context can compare Whitsitt’s residential real estate appraiser checklist with the stricter divorce-specific preparation steps on this page.
Whitsitt & Associates gives Illinois homeowners a practical path from uncertainty to a defensible value conclusion. When buyout math or settlement timing matters, a local divorce property valuation keeps the discussion focused on evidence.
The best attendance plan preserves access, reduces conflict, and keeps the appraiser focused on valuation facts. Some divorce appraisals work well with both spouses present, while some work better with one spouse or a neutral representative.
Both spouses can attend when communication is civil and property access is shared. One spouse can attend when one spouse occupies the home or controls entry. A lawyer, realtor, or neutral third party can attend when conflict is high.
Communication rules should be simple. No spouse should argue about value in front of the appraiser. No spouse should debate blame, occupancy conflict, or settlement positions during the walkthrough.
A divorce appraiser decides valuation issues tied to the real estate. A divorce appraiser does not decide legal issues tied to the divorce. That distinction prevents confusion and keeps the appointment focused.
Helpful facts include the date of a roof replacement, the age of the HVAC system, permit history for a basement finish, square-footage changes from an addition, insurance-backed storm repairs, and any major unresolved defect.
Unhelpful input includes target values, personal hardship narratives, and accusations such as “the other spouse is lowballing the house.”
Illinois courts, not appraisers, control legal relief and final case outcomes through the Illinois family-law process and court-approved forms. (Illinois Courts)
| The Appraiser Determines | The Appraiser Does Not Determine |
| Market value opinion | Who keeps the home |
| Condition and feature analysis | How equity is divided |
| Comparable sale support | Which spouse is more credible |
| Effective date of value | Final court orders |
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After the inspection, the appraiser completes market research, reconciles comparable sales, and delivers the report in accordance with the assignment terms. The report may then support attorney review, mediation, buyout planning, refinancing strategy, or court preparation.
A divorce appraisal does not automatically satisfy mortgage underwriting requirements.
A lender may still require a separate lending appraisal if one spouse later refinances to remove the other spouse from the loan.
The CFPB’s Regulation B appraisal-copy rule states that a creditor must provide an applicant with a copy of appraisals and other written valuations developed in connection with a covered first-lien credit application. (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau)
If spouses disagree with the value, start with a factual review. Check square footage, room count, site details, effective date, comparable sales, and omitted upgrades.
A second appraisal may be appropriate in some cases, but the strongest challenge is an evidence-based challenge.
The final checklist is the shortest operational version of the process. Illinois homeowners should use the final checklist to prepare the property, the document packet, and the appointment logistics before the appraiser arrives.
| Task | Goal |
| Clear access | Prevent missed areas and return visits |
| Organize records | Support accurate reporting |
| Document upgrades | Tie improvements to verifiable facts |
| Document defects | Reduce later disputes over omissions |
| Set attendance rules | Lower conflict during the appointment |
| Keep communication factual | Preserve neutrality and report credibility |
If you need a local Illinois appraiser who understands valuation mechanics and the pressures of divorce, Whitsitt & Associates offers professional appraisal services and responsive scheduling from Champaign.
A divorce appraisal in Illinois is a neutral real estate valuation used for marital property division, buyout calculations, mediation, or court presentation. A divorce appraisal focuses on fair market value and professional appraisal standards rather than either spouse’s preferred number.
Prepare the house by unlocking all areas, fixing obvious minor defects, gathering records, listing upgrades and known damage, and keeping the walkthrough calm and factual. The goal is full visibility and accurate reporting, not persuasion.
Both spouses can attend when communication is civil, and access is coordinated. High-conflict cases often work better with one spouse or a neutral representative present, so the appraiser can inspect without argument or disruption.
The most useful documents are the tax bill, mortgage statement, deed if available, prior appraisal, survey, permits, invoices, and a dated improvement list. Repair records and defect records also matter when the property condition is disputed.
A divorce appraisal may help settlement planning, but a lender may still require a separate mortgage appraisal for underwriting. Refinance approval depends on the lender’s appraisal process, credit criteria, and loan rules.
Cleaning improves visibility and inspection efficiency. Cleaning does not create market value on its own, but clutter and blocked areas can make it harder for the appraiser to accurately document the condition and layout.
Start by reviewing the report for factual errors, omitted upgrades, incorrect measurements, weak comparable sales, or the wrong effective date. A challenge should be evidence-based, and some disputes may justify a second appraisal.
The site visit may take less than an hour or longer, depending on property size and complexity. The full process takes longer because the appraiser must verify facts, research comparable sales, and reconcile the final value conclusion.
Do not argue for a target value, blame the other spouse, or treat the inspection like a settlement hearing. The most useful communication is short, factual, and supported by records such as permits or invoices.
No. An appraiser values the real estate. An appraiser does not decide property division, refinancing terms, or which spouse keeps the home. Those decisions are made by the spouses, counsel, mediator, or court.