Newz: ANSI and UAD 3.6, Trainee Inside the Fast and Cheap Model

February 13, 2026

What’s in This Newsletter (In Order, Scroll Down)

  • LIA AD: Buyer Wants Lower Price to Negotiate
  • ANSI Z765 and the New UAD 3.6: What Appraisers Need to Know
  • New York Lumber Baron’s Private Island Retreat Hits the Market for $2.7 Million—With a Historic 8-Bedroom Mansion
  • We Will Always Need Appraisers: Josh Walitt on Valuation, Technology, and Adaptability By Isaac Peck, Publisher WorkingRE
  • MY AD: What is new in the New URAR. List of data requests for each page of UAD 3.6 SFR report.
  • The Trainee Inside the Fast and Cheap Model
  • The Ethics of Credibility in Real Estate Appraisal By Timothy Andersen, MAI
  • MBA: Mortgage applications decreased 0.3 percent from one week earlier

———————————————–

Click here to subscribe to our FREE weekly appraiser email newsletter and get the latest appraisal news

—————————————-

 

——————————————————-

ANSI Z765 and the New UAD 3.6: What Appraisers Need to Know

Excerpts:

Why ANSI Z765 Matters More Under UAD 3.6

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both adopted ANSI Z765 as the standard for measuring one-unit detached and attached dwellings. For years, ANSI shaped how appraisers calculated gross living area, but measurement practices still varied from one professional to another. Under the new UAD 3.6 framework, those differences matter more because:

The URAR now breaks out finished area by level, making ANSI designations part of the form structure.

Lenders run automated checks that compare the sketch, GLA figures, and room-level data for consistency.

Any mismatch can trigger a revision request, a CU warning, or a QC hold.

In short, ANSI is no longer just a best practice. It’s now deeply connected to how the form captures data and how lenders review appraisals.

Core ANSI Rules that Every Appraiser Must Apply

ANSI Z765 is the national standard for measuring single-family homes. Appraisers must follow the standard in full when required by the assignment. Key elements include:

Above-Grade vs. Below-Grade

A basement is any area partially or fully below grade, regardless of finish. Even if it includes high-quality living space, it must be reported as below-grade finished area, not GLA.

Ceiling Height Requirements….

To read more, Click Here

My comments: Good review of ANSI standards and how they change with UAD 3.6

————————————————————–

New York Lumber Baron’s Private Island Retreat Hits the Market for $2.7 Million—With a Historic 8-Bedroom Mansion

Excerpts: 8 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 9,112 sq.ft., 0.5 acre lot, Built in 1905

Longue Vue Island is in Alexandria Bay on the St. Lawrence River and is understood to be one of the only artificial islands in the state of New York.

The island, which has also been known as Rosette Island and Artificial Island over the years, is home to a stunning eight-bedroom mansion and detached boathouse that were built for its original owner, Hudson Rose, a businessman who specialized in the lumber trade.

The home was designed by the architects Barney & Chapman in 1905. The grand arts & craft home features 8BR/6.5BA, gorgeous white cabinetry with island, stainless steel appliances, formal dining and spacious living room with detailed woodwork, fireplace, hardwood floors and enclosed stone porch that surrounds the first floor. As you leave the first floor, the grand original staircase leads to the second & third floor. Also features an amazing 3-slip deep-water boathouse that can accommodate 4 -6 boats with living quarters above. The upstairs above the boathouse has a wet bar, game room, beautiful wainscotting & hardwood floors throughout, 1BR/1.5 BA and living room.

To see the listing with an aerial view, virtual tour and 49 photos, Click Here

My comments: I have lived on a developed island in San Francisco Bay for the past 40 years. I love my Island of Alameda and will never leave! Of course I am always interested in other islands. What we say is “I hate to leave the island!”

——————————————————————

We Will Always Need Appraisers: Josh Walitt on Valuation, Technology, and Adaptability

By Isaac Peck, Publisher WorkingRE

Excerpts: To thrive in today’s appraisal landscape, adaptability matters more than ever. Markets shift, technology evolves, and clients’ needs change. Appraisers who recognize the versatility of their valuation skills—beyond traditional lender work—are better positioned to diversify, grow, and remain relevant in a changing industry.

Joshua Walitt is the very picture of adaptability and change. Originally a banker, Walitt did a mid-career jump into appraising after realizing that banking wasn’t for him. Since making that choice, Walitt hasn’t just followed his industry; he has set the pace for it.

Walitt has become a sought-after expert on compliance, real estate, and valuation, as well as a reviewer, a national speaker, an educator, and an expert witness. His company, Walitt Solutions, provides consulting services to lenders, appraisers, management companies, technology companies, education providers, and regulators.

Technology and Diversification

When I asked Walitt what the future of appraising looks like, he did not hesitate. “Technology,” he answered. “I don’t know any way around giving an answer without technology coming into it. We’ve had inspection apps for decades. But I think now, the importance of learning and using those is really coming to the forefront. A lot more data collection will be necessary for appraisers. Technology is forcing us to change. We’ll see a lot more velocity, consistency, and repeatability. And not just in the inspection,” he said.

The Future of Residential Valuation

With a wide network of videos, blog posts, and human contacts, Walitt is a presence across the entire appraisal profession. Living in Colorado, he has also served on a local Board of Equalization, resolving disputes between homeowners and assessors. All of this human contact has given Walitt a different view of the future than those who see incoming technologies as more disruptive than constructive. He believes that so long as there is property, people will need human valuation experts.

Walitt told me he was “optimistic about the future of the valuation profession. There’s always a need to know how much a property is worth. At this point in time, we don’t have machines that can replace human judgment, we’ve got a good place for it. With technology, it will look different. Think about the two-minute checkup from your dentist or going to the optometrist and someone remotes in to control the equipment that works on your eyes. We never imagined that we would have that technology, but we do. It’s becoming different, and it will be different,” he said.

To read more, Click Here

My comments: I have been following Walitt for quite a while. Good to know more about him and what he thinks.

—————————————————————

Are you getting too many ad-only emails?

4 ways to get only the FREE email newsletters and NOT the ad-only emails.

1. Twitter: https://twitter.com/appraisaltoday Posted by noon Friday

2. Read on blog www.appraisaltoday.com/blog Posted by noon Friday. You can subscribe to the blog in the upper right of each blog page. NOTE: the popular ads with liability tips are below the first topic on my blog posts.

3. Email Archives: https://appraisaltoday.com/archives

(posted by noon Friday) The link is above and to the left of the big yellow email signup form. Newsletters start with “Newz.” Contains all recent emails sent.

4. Link to the 10 most recent newsletters (no ads) at www.appraisaltoday.com. Scroll down past the big yellow signup block. The newsletters have abbreviated titles, taken from their blog posts.

To read more about the 4 ways, plus information on why I take ads, etc.

Click here

————————————————————–

What is new in the New URAR. List of data requests for each page of UAD 3.6 SFR report.

In the June, 1925 issue of Appraisal Today

Excerpts:

Page 3

Property Access – Search F-1 for full list

Zoning

Compliance

Classification Code

Classification Description

Property use

The type(s) of non-residential use observed on the property.

Agricultural

Commercial (e.g., retail, day care, elder care, beauty or barber shop, doctor’s

office) Industrial

Other (Describe)

Non-Residential Property Use

Hazard Zone

Property Restrictions

Easements

Encroachments

Site Characteristics (Example: topography, rolling, adverse impact

Site features and impact to value/marketability

The Site Features table provides information about relevant site factors that may impact the value and marketability of the property

Site influence

Many are listed plus details required (proximity, impact). Search in F-1

3 examples: agricultural, body of water, busy roadway

Impact classification is requested on some data, in many

categories-influence: Proximity, Impact, Comment

Adverse

The market reaction has a negative impact on the property’s value or marketability.

Beneficial

The market reaction has a positive impact on the property’s value or marketability.

Neutral

No measurable market impact on the property’s value or marketability.

Note: Neutral does not mean equal to other properties. For example, if the

subject and all comparables have the same view, that does not necessarily mean that Impact is Neutral.

Utilities

The appraiser must indicate whether each of the following utilities are connected to the site, and whether the utility is public or private.

Electricity

Gas

Sanitary Sewer

Water

Other (Describe) – if applicable

Broadband Internet

To read the full article, plus 2+ years of previous issues, subscribe to the paid Appraisal Today at www.appraisaltoday.com/order . I hope that at least one education provider will set up a list of each data requested with a live or virtual class that goes through the report page by page explaining what it means! ou can see what you need to know to complete the report.

Not sure if you want to subscribe?

Sign up for monthly auto renewal for $8.25!

Cancel at any time for any reason! You will receive a prorated refund.

$8.25 per month, $24.75 per quarter, and $89 per year (Best Buy)

or $99 per year or $169 for two years

Subscribers get FREE: past 18+ months of past newsletters

What’s the difference between the Appraisal Today free Weekly email newsletter and the paid Monthly newsletter? Click here for more info

————————————————

If you are a paid subscriber and did not receive the

February, 2026 issue emailed on

Monday February 2, 2026 please email info@appraisaltoday.com, and we will send it to you. Be sure to include a comment requesting it. Or, call 510-865-8041

————————————

The Trainee Inside the Fast and Cheap Model

The trainee walked into a job expecting mentorship and instead found a crash course in misconduct.

Excerpts: There is a widening gap in this industry between the people who actually protect the public trust and the people who only talk about it. A recent Reddit post from a Georgia trainee captured that gap with uncomfortable clarity. Not because his experience was unusual, but because it showed exactly what happens when the demand for fast and cheap collides with a profession built on accuracy, accountability, and real judgment.

The trainee described a year of being sent out alone to inspect properties, told to introduce himself using the name of a licensed appraiser who was never present, instructed to drop that person’s license into the file, and discouraged from adding supervisor details because the supervisor did not actually supervise. His so called trainer lived in another state, ignored most of his questions, and only appeared long enough to nitpick minor clerical issues. After twelve months, he could measure a house with precision, but no one had walked him through developing a sales comparison grid, reconciling approaches, or completing a report from start to finish. He was not being trained. He was being used.

And then came the comment that exposed the ecosystem. An appraiser described a local AMC that sends trainees out to inspect because they are cheap, fast, and most importantly invisible to the client. Many lenders do not allow trainee inspections, so instead of disclosing the truth, the AMC buries the trainee’s role behind a vague line in the addendum about a clerical administrative assistant who aids in X, Y, Z. The licensed appraiser signs the report, collects the fee, and keeps the volume flowing, while the trainee gets a small cut and a log of hours that will not lead to competency because no one is training them beyond measuring and sketching.

To read more plus 23+ appraiser comments, Click Here

My comments: This is what happened when licensing started in the 1990s. A licensed appraiser hired trainees and did not teach them how to appraise. Required classes offered by proprietary schools taught trainees how to pass the exam. A generation of appraisers had inadequate or no training and poor classes. It is not their fault.

——————————————————–

The Ethics of Credibility in Real Estate Appraisal

By Timothy Andersen, MAI, MSc., CDEI, MNAA

Excerpts:

The Nature of Credibility

Credibility has many definitions. In real estate appraisal, the definition that matters most is USPAP’s: “…worthy of belief.”

In this article, I’ll demonstrate why credibility is more than just a guide for creating a quality work product. It’s also an ethical obligation to clients, and the cornerstone of public trust in our profession. And I’ll outline the fundamental characteristics of credible appraisal reports: They should be clear, unambiguous, precise, concise, and grounded in logic and epistemic responsibility. (I’ll explain that last term later in the piece.)

Clarity

For appraisals to be credible and appraisal reports non-misleading, appraisers must communicate their reasoning and conclusions clearly. Jargon, overuse of boilerplate, convoluted sentences, internal inconsistencies, and vague language are the enemies of clarity.

The Ethical Imperative to Improve

The ethics of credibility demand more than technical competence and “my 20 years of experience.” They require a steadfast commitment to clarity, accuracy, sound logic, and rigorous intellectual honesty.

Credibility isn’t a static trait; it requires ongoing effort. We can always improve our writing, analytical skills, and ethical awareness. And we don’t have to do this alone in our offices. Professional organizations, workshops, peer networks, state appraisal coalition meetings, and national conventions are there to help us refine these abilities.

Ethical and competent real estate appraisers have a duty to produce appraisals that inspire trust and reports that are transparent, easy to understand, and not misleading. Appraisal reports have far-reaching implications. They influence financial decisions, impact communities, and shape perceptions of our profession. By committing to the ethical principle of credibility and all that it encompasses, we as appraisers can uphold the integrity of our profession, ensure its long-term success, and, as USPAP’s Preamble urges, “promote and maintain a high level of public trust in appraisal practice.”

To read more, Click Here

My comments: Well written and worth reading. We often get caught up in producing appraisals and can forget what it all means.

————————————————–

HOW TO USE THE NUMBERS BELOW. Appraisals are ordered after the loan application. These numbers tell you the future for the next few weeks. For more information on how they are compiled, Click Here.

Note: I publish a graph of this data every month in my paid monthly newsletter, Appraisal Today. For more information or get a FREE sample go to www.appraisaltoday.com/order Or call 510-865-8041, MTW, 7 AM to noon, Pacific time.

My comments: Rates are going up and down. We are all waiting for rates to drop lower in 2026.

Mortgage applications decreased 0.3 percent from one week earlier

WASHINGTON, D.C. (February 11, 2026) — Mortgage applications decreased 0.3 percent from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending February 6, 2026.

The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 0.3 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 2 percent compared with the previous week. The Refinance Index increased 1 percent from the previous week and was 101 percent higher than the same week one year ago. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 2 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index increased 4 percent compared with the previous week and was 4 percent higher than the same week one year ago.

“Mortgage applications were relatively flat over the week, but it was a mixed bag for the different loan types. The 30-year fixed rate was unchanged at 6.21 percent, and conventional applications declined for both purchases and refinances as borrowers held out for another drop in rates or shifted to other loan types,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “FHA purchase and refinance applications increased, helped partially by the FHA rate declining and remaining 20 basis points lower than the conforming 30-year fixed rate.”

Added Kan, “Borrowers are increasingly utilizing FHA loans as affordability challenges remain, despite recent improvements. Similarly, the ARM share increased to a seven-week high with ARM rates almost a percentage point lower than fixed rates.”

The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 56.4 percent of total applications from 57.1 percent the previous week. The adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) share of activity increased to 8.0 percent of total applications.

The FHA share of total applications increased to 18.4 percent from 17.8 percent the week prior. The VA share of total applications increased to 16.0 percent from 15.8 percent the week prior. The USDA share of total applications remained unchanged at 0.4 percent from the week prior.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($832,750 or less) remained unchanged at 6.21 percent, with points remaining unchanged at 0.56 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value ratio (LTV) loans. The effective rate increased from last week.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with jumbo loan balances (greater than $832,750) decreased to 6.30 percent from 6.32 percent, with points remaining unchanged at 0.34 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans. The effective rate decreased from last week.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages backed by the FHA decreased to 6.01 percent from 6.04 percent, with points increasing to 0.68 from 0.67 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans. The effective rate decreased from last week.

The average contract interest rate for 15-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 5.65 percent from 5.61 percent, with points increasing to 0.68 from 0.63 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans. The effective rate increased from last week.

The average contract interest rate for 5/1 ARMs decreased to 5.33 percent from 5.37 percent, with points increasing to 0.67 from 0.58 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent LTV loans. The effective rate decreased from last week.

The survey covers U.S. closed-end residential mortgage applications originated through retail and consumer direct channels. The survey has been conducted weekly since 1990. Respondents include mortgage bankers, commercial banks, thrifts, and credit unions. Base period and value for all indexes is March 16, 1990=100.

—————————————————————————-

Ann O’Rourke, MAI, SRA, MBA

Appraiser and Publisher Appraisal Today

1826 Clement Ave. Suite 203 Alameda, CA 94501

Phone: 510-865-8041

Email:  ann@appraisaltoday.com

Online: www.appraisaltoday.com

We want to know what you think!! Please leave a comment.