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ValuationNY Exam

Valuation and Market Analysis for New York

Master valuation and market analysis concepts for the NY real estate exam.40+ practice questions with detailed explanations and New York-specific content.

40+Questions
10%of Exam
11Sub-topics
Valuation and Market Analysis β€” Study Card
Valuation and Market Analysis study card infographic showing key concepts, exam weight (10%), and memory aids for the New York real estate exam
AI-generated study card for Valuation and Market Analysis. Covers 10% of the real estate exam.

What You'll Learn

Key valuation and market analysis concepts for the New York real estate exam

Comparative market analysis (CMA) techniques
Cost, income, and sales comparison approaches
New York market trends and property valuation
Appraisal reports and USPAP standards
Exam Coverage
How Valuation and Market Analysis appears on the NY exam
Exam Weight10%

Appraisal methods, comparative market analysis, and property valuation. This topic is essential for both the national and New York-specific portions of the exam.

Study Tips
How to master Valuation efficiently
  • Remember CBS: Comparable Better, Subtract; or CIA: Comparable Inferior, Add
  • Physical depreciation can be curable or incurable; economic obsolescence is always incurable
  • Practice cap rate and GRM calculations until they become automatic
  • Sales Comparison is most common for residential; Income Approach for commercial

Valuation and Market Analysis: In-Depth Guide for New York

Valuation and Market Analysis is a critical topic that covers how property value is determined. Every real estate agent needs to understand the three approaches to value and when each is most appropriate: the Sales Comparison Approach for residential properties, the Cost Approach for unique or new properties, and the Income Approach for investment properties.

The Sales Comparison Approach is the most commonly used method for residential properties. Master the adjustment process β€” you always adjust comparable properties to the subject, adding value for features the comparable lacks and subtracting for features the subject lacks. Remember: "CBS" β€” Comparable Better, Subtract; Comparable Worse, Add (or the more intuitive "CIA" β€” Comparable Inferior, Add).

Understanding depreciation is essential for the Cost Approach: physical deterioration (wear and tear), functional obsolescence (outdated design), and economic/external obsolescence (caused by factors outside the property). Know that physical deterioration can be curable or incurable, while economic obsolescence is always incurable. For the Income Approach, master the cap rate formula (Cap Rate = NOI Γ· Value) and the GRM formula (GRM = Price Γ· Gross Rent).

For New York-specific regulations, consult the New York exam prep guide and practice with our Valuation and Market Analysis practice questions.

How New York Tests Valuation

The New York real estate exam allocates approximately 10% of questions to Valuation and Market Analysis. That means roughly 8 out of 75 questions on the salesperson exam will cover this topic. The DOS requires candidates to demonstrate competency in both national valuation principles and NY-specific regulations.

New York exam questions on valuation and market analysis are typically scenario-based, requiring you to apply concepts to realistic situations rather than simply recall definitions. Focus your study on understanding how valuation rules work in practice, not just what they are.

Recent New York Regulatory Updates

  • Buyer Representation Agreement Requirement β€” New York DOS mandates written buyer agency agreements before showing properties, aligning with the NAR settlement. Agreements must disclose compensation terms and agent duties.
  • Good Cause Eviction Protections Expanded β€” New York expanded good cause eviction protections statewide, affecting landlord-tenant law questions. Agents must understand tenant rights in rental and investment transactions.
View all New York law updates β†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Valuation and Market Analysis typically makes up 8-12% of the New York real estate exam. You can expect approximately 10-18 questions on this topic, covering both national and New York-specific concepts.

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40+ questions covering this topic across all states.

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