Call Granicher Appraisals when you need valuations regarding Butte divorces

If you are getting a divorce, choose Granicher Appraisals to provide an accurate value of real estate to be divided.

We know that divorce can be very difficult. There are countless decisions looming, including what's going to happen to the home. There are generally two options regarding real estate - it can be sold and the proceeds divvied up, or one party can "buy out" the other. In either case, one or both parties would find it in their best interest to commission an appraisal of the mutual real estate.

When the reason for an appraisal is a couple splitting up, it should include a well-established, authoritative report that is defensible during a trial. When you order an appraisal from Granicher Appraisals, you are assured the best in service with professional courtesy and the highest quality appraisal. Through experience and education, we've learned how to handle the prickly needs of a divorce situation.

Granicher Appraisals is at your service whenever you need an appraisal related to a divorce or other division of assets.

Attorneys as well as accountants in California depend on our analysis when calculating what real estate is worth for estates, divorces, or other disputes depending on a value opinion. We have a lot of expertise working with everyone involved and are standing by to assist your needs. We create appraisal documents that fulfill the requirements of the courts and various agencies.

As a lawyer dealing with a divorce, your case's evidence typically requires an appraisal to ascertain market value for the residential real estate involved. A great deal of the time the divorce date may not be the same as the date you ordered the appraisal. We're comfortable with the methods and what's necessary to develop a retrospective appraisal with an effective date and Market Value opinion that matches the date of divorce. For each divorce appraisal we take on, we understand that they need to be handled delicately. The ethics provision within the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) binds us with confidentiality, resulting in the utmost discretion.