Three reliable ways to know your home's real value — plus why online estimates routinely miss the mark in Central Florida's diverse neighborhoods.
Get a Private Property ReviewThere is no single universal answer — but there are three legitimate methods that give you an accurate picture. Each has trade-offs in cost, speed, and precision.
A local real estate agent compares your home to recently sold properties nearby, adjusting for size, condition, and features. The most common starting point for sellers.
Cost: Free • Time: 1–3 daysA licensed appraiser physically inspects the property and produces a formal written valuation. Required by lenders; the most authoritative independent opinion of value.
Cost: $300–$600 • Time: 1–2 weeksA local cash buyer assesses the property and presents a real offer based on current as-is market value. No cost, no obligation — and it gives you a concrete data point.
Cost: Free • Time: 24–72 hoursAppraisers and experienced buyers use the same core framework to arrive at a number. Understanding it helps you see where your property stands.
The foundation of any valuation. Recent sales of similar homes within a half-mile to one-mile radius — typically within the last 3–6 months — establish the baseline. The closer the comp in location, size, age, and condition, the more weight it carries.
Dividing sale prices by square footage allows comparison across homes of different sizes. In Orlando, price per square foot varies widely by submarket — from the low $100s in some areas to $300+ in premium communities. Neighborhood context determines what's normal.
Appraisers add or subtract value based on condition relative to comps. A home with an updated kitchen, new HVAC, and a recent roof commands a premium. A home with deferred maintenance, dated systems, or foundation issues is adjusted downward.
Proximity to top-rated schools, waterfront access, HOA community amenities, and major employment centers all factor into price. Location is the one thing about a home that cannot be changed — and Orlando buyers pay for it.
Zillow, Redfin, and similar tools use automated models based on public records and recent sales data. They are useful for a general range — not for decision-making.
Two homes a quarter-mile apart can be in different school zones, HOA communities, or flood zones — and those differences produce meaningfully different values. Algorithms rarely capture this.
Online tools pull permit and tax data — they cannot see that your roof is 20 years old, your kitchen was renovated last year, or that you've added a screened patio. Condition drives real value.
Public records typically record sales 30–90 days after closing. In a moving market, the comps underlying an online estimate may already be stale by the time you see them.
An algorithm cannot observe the layout, natural light, storage, garage, or the overall appeal that drives buyer offers. Physical review is the only way to capture these factors.
The same 1,800 square-foot home can command dramatically different prices depending on where it sits in the metro. Here is a general illustration of how dramatically values differ — the same home, very different prices.
| Neighborhood / Area | Typical Price Range | Key Value Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| Winter Park | $450,000 – $900,000+ | Historic character, top schools, walkability, prestige |
| Lake Nona | $380,000 – $700,000+ | Master-planned, Medical City, modern builds, amenities |
| Dr. Phillips / Sand Lake | $400,000 – $800,000+ | Restaurant Row, school zones, gated communities |
| Apopka | $280,000 – $430,000 | Growth corridor, suburban, newer construction |
| Kissimmee | $240,000 – $380,000 | Proximity to tourism, diverse inventory |
| Pine Hills | $200,000 – $300,000 | Urban, established, higher investor activity |
| Horizon West | $360,000 – $600,000+ | New construction, top-rated schools, growth |
Ranges are illustrative for a typical 3BR/2BA home and reflect general market conditions. Individual property values vary based on condition, lot, and community.
Understanding the factors in your control helps you frame your property correctly, regardless of which selling path you choose.
Most sellers think about one number — what the home would sell for on the open market after full preparation. But there are actually two relevant values, and understanding both changes how you make decisions.
The price your home would achieve fully updated, staged, and listed on the MLS in peak condition. This is the ceiling — and it comes with costs: renovation budget, contractor coordination, carrying time, agent commission, and the risk that the market shifts before you close.
What a buyer will pay for your property in its current condition, today. This is the floor — but it eliminates all renovation costs, delays, showings, and contingencies. For many sellers, the net difference between as-is proceeds and retail net is smaller than expected once all selling costs are accounted for.
Knowing both numbers — and doing the actual math on what you'd net from each path — is the only way to make a fully informed decision about how to sell.
We work exclusively in Central Florida and understand the neighborhood-level factors that drive real value — not averages and algorithms.
We review your property and present a straightforward offer within 24–72 hours. No obligation, no cost, no sales pressure.
Whether your home is move-in ready or needs significant work, we can make an offer based on its actual as-is condition today.
Skip the guesswork. Get a private, no-obligation property review from a local buyer who knows the Central Florida market.
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