This is the appraisal trap. An agent inflates the figure to win the listing. The vendor accepts it because it is the best number in the room. The campaign launches on a foundation that was never solid. What happens next follows a sequence that is entirely predictable and almost never ends where the vendor hoped.
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.
Why Vendors Feel Stuck After Choosing on Price Alone
An overpriced campaign has a shape to it. Strong photography, good presentation, a reasonable agent - and still, the results do not come. Because none of those things overcome a price the active buyer pool has already assessed and rejected. The buyers in Gawler who were genuinely interested in the property walked past it in week one. They are not coming back simply because the price dropped. Some will. Most have moved on.
What a Genuine Appraisal Actually Looks Like
A genuine market appraisal is built on evidence. Comparable sales from the last sixty to ninety days in the same suburb or nearby streets. Properties with similar land size, bedroom count and condition. Actual transaction data - not asking prices, settled prices. An agent who cannot produce this evidence is working from opinion, and opinion without data is just a number on a page.
Vendors who do their groundwork on trusting the highest appraisal mistake ahead of the appraisal stage are less likely to be swayed by a high number without supporting evidence.
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
What does an honest appraisal look like compared to an inflated one
An inflated appraisal tends to reveal itself under questioning. The agent becomes vague about the comparable sales, pivots to general statements about the market, or produces comparables from different suburbs or different time periods. A genuine appraisal does not wilt under scrutiny - it is strengthened by it. The agent who welcomes specific questions about methodology is almost always the one worth taking seriously.
Can I get out of an agency agreement if the agent overquoted
Your options depend significantly on what the agency agreement says and how the underperformance is framed. Agents who significantly overquoted and then cannot perform are sometimes willing to release vendors to avoid a formal dispute. A professional conversation about ending an agreement is worth having before assuming you are locked in. A property lawyer or the relevant South Australian consumer body can clarify your specific rights if the direct conversation does not resolve it.
How many opinions should I get before signing
Three is enough - but only if you ask the right questions of each agent. The number of appraisals matters less than the quality of the interrogation you apply to each one. Three appraisals with proper scrutiny of the supporting evidence will tell you more than five appraisals where you accepted each figure at face value. The goal is not more opinions - it is better evidence.
What should I prioritise when comparing agents
Track record is everything - but local, specific, recent track record. Not general brand presence. Not awards. Not how long they have been in the industry. What has this agent actually sold in Gawler East or the immediately surrounding area in the last six months, what did those properties list for, and what did they sell for? That question, answered honestly, tells you more than any presentation or pitch ever will.