Florida law requires a certified real estate appraisal before a family court in Miami-Dade County can divide marital property.
The divorce appraisal process in Florida follows seven defined steps — from retaining a state-licensed appraiser through final court submission — and each step carries legal weight that determines your settlement outcome.
Courts rely on the appraised value, not the Zillow estimate, not the listing price. A credible, USPAP-compliant report protects your financial interest under Florida Statute § 61.075, which governs equitable distribution of marital assets.
Home Value Inc provides certified divorce appraisals in Miami-Dade with court-admissible USPAP reports. Call now to protect your share of the marital estate.

A divorce appraisal is a legal instrument, not just a market estimate. Florida courts operating under § 61.075 require that the report meet the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP), as enforced by the Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board (FREAB). Standard lender appraisals carry no such courtroom obligation.
| Feature | Divorce Appraisal | Standard Lender Appraisal |
| Purpose | Equitable distribution of marital assets | Mortgage underwriting |
| Legal standard | USPAP + Florida Statute § 61.075 | USPAP + FNMA guidelines |
| Effective date flexibility | Can be retroactive (date of separation) | Current market value only |
| Court admissibility | Required | Not required |
| Appraiser credential required | Certified Residential or Certified General | Licensed or above |
The effective date matters most in contested cases. Florida courts often order an appraisal as of the date of the petition for dissolution — not today’s market date — which means your appraiser must reconstruct historical market data from that point forward.
The first step in the divorce appraisal process in Florida is confirming your appraiser holds a Certified Residential or Certified General credential issued by FREAB.
The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) maintains the license lookup at myfloridalicense.com, where you can verify any appraiser’s active standing before engagement.
Either spouse may retain their own appraiser. Both appraisers work independently, and their reports are submitted separately to the court. This is standard practice in Miami-Dade County contested divorces.
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Before the appraiser schedules the inspection, your family law attorney must confirm the legally required effective date with the court. Florida Statute § 61.075(6) allows courts to set the valuation date as the date of filing, the date of trial, or an alternate date specified by the court.
Getting this wrong invalidates the report. An appraiser who values the property as of today, when the court ordered a 2023 effective date, has produced an unusable document, and you will pay for a second appraisal.
The appraiser conducts an interior and exterior inspection of the marital property. For divorce appraisals in Miami-Dade County, both spouses or their attorneys are notified of the inspection date. Neither party is required to be present, but either may attend.
The appraiser measures the gross living area (GLA), documents condition, photographs all rooms, and records any improvements made during the marriage — additions, renovations, permitted work — that affect value.
Improvements funded by one spouse’s separate property may be subject to a credit argument, so complete documentation matters.
What the appraiser records during inspection:
The appraiser selects a minimum of three closed comparable sales within Miami-Dade County, typically within a one-mile radius and a 12-month lookback period from the effective date.
When the effective date is historical, the appraiser sources MLS records and county deed data from that specific timeframe — not current sales.
Each comparable is adjusted for differences in GLA, lot size, condition, location, bedroom/bath count, and amenities. The property appraisal process in South Florida involves tighter comp selection than in many other markets due to the variety of neighborhood micro-markets within Miami-Dade.
After adjustments, the appraiser reconciles the three approaches — sales comparison, income approach (if rental), and cost approach (for newer builds) — into a single concluded value. For most Miami-Dade residential divorces, the sales comparison approach carries the highest weight.
The completed report is a full USPAP Summary Appraisal Report. It includes the appraiser’s certification, limiting conditions, scope of work, all comparable data, and the concluded market value as of the effective date. This document is what your attorney files with the court.
Home Value Inc delivers USPAP-compliant divorce appraisal reports in Miami-Dade County within 7–10 business days of inspection. Start your divorce appraisal and get your report on schedule.
If you’re ready to get started, call us now!
When both spouses retain separate appraisers, the court receives two reports. Value gaps of more than 10% are common in contested Miami-Dade cases, particularly in luxury coastal markets like Coral Gables, Brickell, and Miami Beach.
Your attorney can respond to the opposing report in three ways:
| Response Option | When to Use |
| File a rebuttal letter from your appraiser | The value gap is attributable to specific comp selection errors |
| Depose the opposing appraiser | The report contains USPAP violations or unexplained adjustments |
| Request a court-appointed neutral appraiser | Both reports are defensible but irreconcilable |
If the court-approved divorce appraiser in Miami-Dade that produced the opposing report used sales outside the subject’s neighborhood or failed to adjust for condition, your appraiser can submit a documented rebuttal identifying those specific deficiencies.
The final step is court submission through your attorney. In uncontested Florida divorces, the appraisal report is filed as a supporting exhibit and rarely requires the appraiser’s testimony.
In contested proceedings, the appraiser may be deposed or called as an expert witness under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.390.
If deposed, the appraiser defends the methodology, comparable selection, and adjustments on record. Choose an appraiser with documented court experience — not just field experience — because deposition preparation and testimony are distinct professional skills.

In Miami-Dade County, the full divorce appraisal process, from retention to report delivery, takes 7–14 business days under normal volume. Rush turnarounds of 3–5 business days are available at a premium and are warranted when trial dates fall within two weeks of engagement.
| Phase | Typical Duration |
| Scheduling and inspection | 2–4 business days |
| Comparable research and analysis | 2–3 business days |
| Report writing and review | 2–4 business days |
| Attorney delivery and filing | 1–2 business days |
The Miami-Dade appraisal timeline can extend when the effective date is historical, and MLS records require manual retrieval, or when the property is a multi-unit or has mixed residential-commercial use.
Divorce appraisal fees in Miami-Dade County range from $400 to $800 for standard single-family residential properties as of 2026. Luxury properties above $1.5M, waterfront homes, and multi-family assets command higher fees, reflecting the complexity of the comparable search and report scope.
Factors that increase cost: retroactive effective date requiring historical research, court testimony or deposition appearance, rush delivery, and complex property types such as condominiums with limited interior comp access.
The home appraisal cost in Miami in 2026 provides a full breakdown of fee ranges across standard, complex, and luxury residential assignments.
Yes. Under Florida Statute § 61.075, either party may challenge an appraisal by filing a competing report, requesting a deposition of the opposing appraiser, or petitioning the court for a neutral third-party appraisal.
Grounds for challenge include USPAP violations, comparable sales sourced outside the market area, unsupported adjustments, and failure to inspect the interior.
The reconsideration of value process in Florida follows a structured protocol — your appraiser submits a written rebuttal identifying specific errors with market data support, not just a disagreement with the concluded number.
What is a divorce appraisal in Florida?
A divorce appraisal in Florida is a USPAP-compliant market value report completed by a state-certified appraiser and used as evidence under Florida Statute § 61.075 to help courts equitably distribute marital real estate during dissolution proceedings.
Who pays for the divorce appraisal in Florida?
Florida courts typically order each spouse to pay for their own appraiser. In some cases, the court assigns the cost as a marital expense divided equally, or one spouse absorbs the fee as part of the final settlement agreement.
Can both spouses use the same appraiser?
Yes, but only in uncontested divorces where both parties agree on the value and need one report for the filing. In contested cases, each spouse retains an independent certified appraiser to avoid conflicts of interest.
What happens if the two appraisals have different values?
When two divorce appraisals produce conflicting values in Florida, the court may reconcile the reports based on argument, depose both appraisers, or appoint a neutral third certified appraiser whose concluded value then becomes the binding court-ordered figure.
Does the appraiser need to inspect the property in person?
Yes. Florida divorce courts require a full interior and exterior inspection. Desktop or drive-by appraisals do not meet the scope of work required for court-admissible reports under Florida USPAP standards.
How far back can the effective date go? Florida courts can order an effective date as far back as the date of the original petition for dissolution. Appraisers must source historical MLS data and county records from that period, which adds research time and may increase the fee.
What credentials must a Florida divorce appraiser hold?
The appraiser must hold a Certified Residential or Certified General credential issued by the Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board (FREAB), verified through DBPR. A Licensed Appraiser credential is insufficient for court-admissible divorce reports in Florida.
How do I prepare my home for a divorce appraisal inspection?
Clean the property, ensure all rooms are accessible, gather permits for any renovations completed during the marriage, and have HOA documents available if applicable. Review the pre-appraisal checklist for a complete preparation guide.
Can a divorce appraisal be used for tax purposes?
No. A divorce appraisal establishes market value for equitable distribution only. Separate appraisals are required for estate tax, property tax protest, or capital gains basis purposes — each has a different scope of work and effective date requirement.
How soon before trial should I order the divorce appraisal?
Order the appraisal at least 30 days before the scheduled trial date. This allows time for delivery, attorney review, opposing counsel review, and any deposition scheduling without a continuance request.
Home Value Inc completes Miami-Dade divorce appraisals with court-ready USPAP reports and deposition-experienced certified appraisers. Schedule your appraisal today and protect your outcome.
Home Value Inc. performs residential and commercial appraisals for its clients in greater Miami-Dade County and the following cities in South Florida. We provide services to the following cities -