The VA construction loan appraisal process is one of the most misunderstood parts of the entire build. It works differently than a standard home appraisal, and veterans who go in without understanding it often run into expensive surprises.
Here is what actually happens.
Why the Appraisal Is Different for Construction Loans
When you buy an existing home with a VA loan, the appraiser visits the property, evaluates the home, and gives you a value based on what is there.
With a VA construction loan, there is no home yet. The appraiser has to determine the value of something that does not exist — a completed home based on plans, specifications, and comparable sales in your area.
This is called an appraisal based on proposed construction. The VA appraiser reviews your building plans and specifications, then estimates what the completed home will be worth when it is finished.
What the Appraiser Reviews
Before the appraisal can be ordered, your lender will need a complete set of construction documents. These typically include your floor plans and blueprints, a complete list of specifications and materials, a plot plan showing the home’s placement on the lot, and a signed builder contract with a fixed price.
The more complete and detailed your documentation, the smoother the appraisal process will be. Incomplete plans slow everything down.
The Notice of Value
Once the VA appraiser completes the review, they issue what is called a Notice of Value — or NOV. This is the VA’s official determination of what your completed home will be worth.
The Notice of Value is critical. Your loan amount cannot exceed the NOV. If your build costs more than the appraised value, you will need to cover the difference out of pocket or redesign the home to reduce costs.
This is one of the most common points of failure in VA construction loans. Veterans design a home, get a builder quote, and then find out the appraised value comes in lower than the build cost. Having a realistic sense of local comparable sales before you finalize your plans can prevent this.
VA Minimum Property Requirements
In addition to establishing value, the VA appraiser also evaluates whether the completed home will meet VA Minimum Property Requirements — commonly called MPRs.
MPRs cover things like safe drinking water, functional heating and cooling, adequate roofing, proper electrical systems, and overall structural integrity. These are basic habitability standards, not luxury requirements.
Your builder should be familiar with VA MPRs. If your plans include anything that would fail these standards, it is better to know before construction begins than during the final inspection.
The Final Inspection
When construction is complete, a final inspection is required before the loan can close permanently. The VA appraiser — or an approved inspector — will visit the completed home and verify that it was built according to the plans that were originally appraised.
If there are deviations from the original plans, those deviations need to be documented and approved. Significant changes may require a new appraisal or updated Notice of Value.
How Long the Appraisal Takes
VA construction loan appraisals take longer than standard appraisals. Expect the initial appraisal based on plans to take two to four weeks from the time your complete documentation is submitted.
In markets with fewer VA-approved appraisers, this timeline can stretch further. Plan for it. Do not schedule your construction start date assuming the appraisal will come back quickly.
The Bottom Line
The VA construction loan appraisal is based on plans rather than an existing structure. Your loan amount is capped at the appraised value. Understanding this process before you finalize your build plans protects you from the most common and most costly surprise in VA construction lending.
Leave a Reply