- This topic has 24 replies, 16 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 8 months ago by earlyretirement.
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December 16, 2011 at 9:22 AM #19361December 16, 2011 at 9:41 AM #734726desmondParticipant
If you would have hired somebody to do Zillow would have only decreased the value $10K.
December 16, 2011 at 9:50 AM #734727paramountParticipantI only wish zillow was not accurate.
Values in Temecula are going down, down, down
Of course this is not the time of the year that those crook tax assessors appraise your house, they wait until house prices are at seasonal high’s. Thanks California Public Employee Unions.
December 16, 2011 at 9:51 AM #734728NotCrankyParticipantThat’s hard but very satisfying work knowing that you are good to go for years ahead. (pun not intended but acknowledged).
December 16, 2011 at 6:26 PM #734765carlsbadworkerParticipantZillow is actually pretty accurate when the market price is moving slowly.
The time when it is fairly inaccurate is when prices are moving very quickly…like year 2008.
December 16, 2011 at 8:59 PM #734770patbParticipantZillow is best for trend not absolute value
March 27, 2014 at 2:09 AM #772278HenryPPParticipantFrom time to time, I check my home’s value estimate on Trulia and Zillow. Over the last few months, something odd has been going on.
Trulia shows my home’s value increasing relatively steadily. That seems to follow the general area trend.
Zillow shows something COMPLETELY different. It shows a steady rise in the first half of 2013, and then a steady (and rapid) drop since mid-2013.
The rise according to Zillow mirrored the rise according to Trulia. But then there was a complete disconnect in mid-2013.
The strange thing is that the drop, according to Zillow, has been very substantial (over 30% since mid-2013). In fact, it now shows the value as being BELOW the 2011 price bottom. That’s just weird.
None of the other homes in the neighborhood have any similar drop, according to Zillow. In fact, Zillow has them all either holding their value or increasing. So it’s not area-specific. Rather, it seems to be home-specific (and, specifically, my home).
Anyone have any idea what’s going on?
March 27, 2014 at 7:07 AM #772279livinincaliParticipant[quote=HenryPP]Anyone have any idea what’s going on?[/quote]
Zillow doesn’t like you. Or mostly likely their algorithm for estimating home prices just isn’t that good.
March 27, 2014 at 9:35 AM #772281paramountParticipant[quote=HenryPP]
Anyone have any idea what’s going on?[/quote]Are the other homes similar in size, etc..?
Housing prices could be cooling based on recent data, particularly pricier properties.
March 27, 2014 at 3:01 PM #772287joecParticipantI would just look at recent sales in your area and ignore what the Zestimate is…
March 27, 2014 at 3:45 PM #772289HenryPPParticipantThe other homes in the neighborhood are very similar. Same square footage for the houses, with minor variation in land area. All were built at the same time, all look very similar. Basically a neighborhood of cookie-cutter mid-sized family homes.
As for prices cooling, why would only my house be cooling, according to Zillow? Zillow doesn’t have the prices on any of the others dropping. And a 30% drop in a few months is not “cooling” – it’s a crash.
And Trulia shows all the houses, including mine, rising.
Maybe it’s as livinincali says. Maybe Zillow just doesn’t like me. 😀
I’m treating it all as a bit of a joke. Except I have this nagging feeling that someone is manipulating the price for this particular home, and I don’t know why.
March 27, 2014 at 7:51 PM #772295moneymakerParticipantAny true Californian would sue their ass in court. Only wish I was joking! If I were selling in the near future I would, or get an appraisal done then send them a nasty note.
March 27, 2014 at 8:05 PM #772296LAAFTERHOURSParticipantPlay around with your zillow stats on the home. The price will go up and down based upon what you enter (at least mine did)
March 27, 2014 at 8:36 PM #772297moneymakerParticipant[quote=LAAFTERHOURS]Play around with your zillow stats on the home. The price will go up and down based upon what you enter (at least mine did)[/quote]
When I get my permitted 26K in solar panels in May I’ll see if Zillow takes any of that into account.March 28, 2014 at 10:52 AM #772303JazzmanParticipantThis debate about Zillow was going on years back. Trulia not much better in my view. Redfin is better as it allows you to choose the comps. The first two it chooses are often enough to give you an idea. Redfin also guides you through how to do a CMA (comparative market analysis). They also do their own market analysis reviews.
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