A Loomis date of death appraiser determines the fair market value of real estate as of a specific prior effective date, most commonly the date of death. A date of death appraisal in Loomis is often needed for probate, estate settlement, trust administration, IRS reporting, inherited property valuation, and stepped-up basis documentation.
Whether you are looking for an estate appraisal in Loomis, a probate appraisal in Loomis, or a retrospective appraisal in Loomis, the purpose is to develop a well-supported opinion of value based on market evidence from the effective date, not simply current market conditions.
Date of death appraisals in Loomis require more than pulling recent sales. The analysis may include historical MLS data, prior listings, public records, comparable sales activity, neighborhood trends, property condition, lot utility, location influences, and market conditions that existed as of the retrospective effective date.
My appraisal process emphasizes comparable sales research, market-supported analysis, and market-extracted adjustments through paired sales when the available data supports that level of analysis. This is especially important when two properties appear similar on paper but compete differently due to condition, location, size, age, floor plan, site utility, view influence, or neighborhood segment.
For inherited property, estate settlement, probate, trust administration, and stepped-up basis reporting, the appraisal should reflect how buyers would have reacted to the property as of the date of death, not how the market appears today.
Updated May 29, 2026, 10:43 p.m. using recent MLS data
Market trends help provide context, but a date of death appraisal reflects the market conditions as of the effective date, not today. In Loomis, changes in inventory, days on market, and pricing trends can impact how comparable sales are selected and adjusted in a retrospective appraisal.
Loomis is a smaller Placer County market with rural-residential appeal, larger lots, custom and semi-custom homes, and location influence from nearby Granite Bay, Rocklin, and Roseville. A date of death appraisal in Loomis may require careful analysis of lot utility, acreage influence, condition, custom-quality differences, and comparable sale selection from similar buyer pools.
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The Loomis real estate market is monitored using MLS activity, public records, comparable sales, listing history, marketing times, and price trends. This market data is useful when developing a date of death appraisal in Loomis, a retrospective appraisal in Loomis, or an estate appraisal for probate, trust administration, stepped-up basis, and IRS reporting.
Over the past 12 months, Loomis had approximately 154 closed MLS sales, with a median sold price of approximately $847,450. The median marketing time during that period was approximately 17 days.
Over the past 30 days, Loomis had approximately 17 closed MLS sales, with a median sold price of approximately $1,273,000 and a median marketing time of approximately 7 days.
Recent 7-day MLS activity in Loomis shows approximately 3 closed sales. This short-term activity helps indicate current market direction, but it is only one part of the analysis used in a retrospective appraisal.
For a Loomis date of death appraisal, current market statistics are not simply applied to the property. The analysis must focus on the market evidence that existed as of the effective date, including comparable sales, pending activity, listing history, marketing time, and buyer behavior around the date of death.
The Loomis market can involve larger-lot and rural-residential appeal, custom-home variation, condition differences, and buyer demand that may differ from nearby suburban tract markets.
Loomis is a smaller Placer County market with rural-residential appeal, larger lots, custom and semi-custom homes, and location influence from nearby Granite Bay, Rocklin, and Roseville. A date of death appraisal in Loomis may require careful analysis of lot utility, acreage influence, condition, custom-quality differences, and comparable sale selection from similar buyer pools.
When performing retrospective appraisals in Loomis, market participants may react differently depending on:
Many properties in Loomis can be completed as a desktop appraisal in Loomis when the property is reasonably straightforward and sufficient market data is available. For estate, probate, trust, and stepped-up basis assignments, a desktop format may be appropriate when the appraisal problem can be solved using MLS history, public records, prior listings, aerial imagery, comparable sales, and historical market data.
A retrospective appraisal in Loomis does not always require an interior inspection, especially when the effective date is in the past and the purpose of the assignment is to estimate fair market value as of the date of death. The key issue is whether the available data is strong enough to support a credible opinion of value.
Desktop date of death appraisals in Loomis may be appropriate depending on:
Some assignments may still require an exterior inspection, interior photos, additional research, or an expanded scope of work depending on property complexity, data availability, or the intended use of the appraisal.
Many estates involve multiple properties, sometimes spread across several cities or counties. In those situations, the cost of traditional appraisal reports with interior inspections, exterior photographs, travel time, and expanded documentation can increase quickly.
Desktop retrospective appraisals provide a more efficient alternative when the assignment is appropriate for this type of analysis. By relying on MLS history, public records, prior listings, market data, aerial imagery, and historical comparable sales, many properties can be appraised without the cost and delay associated with traditional inspection-based reporting.
In many markets outside of the immediate Bay Area core, where property values and assignment complexity are often lower, desktop appraisals can be a practical and cost-effective solution for estate and stepped-up basis purposes.
This option focuses primarily on the valuation analysis itself without additional presentation layers that may not be necessary for every assignment.
This format is designed for clients who prefer a more comprehensive presentation package with additional supporting exhibits and documentation.
Some assignments may still require an exterior inspection or expanded scope depending on property complexity, market conditions, or data availability.
A properly supported retrospective appraisal helps establish the fair market value of inherited real estate as of the date of death.
These reports are commonly used by:
In addition to Loomis, appraisal services are available in:
For a full list of service areas, visit the East Bay Date of Death Appraiser page.
Desktop retrospective appraisals available throughout Placer County and surrounding areas.
📞 (510) 828-5876
✉️ jameskvaldez@gmail.com