---
doc_id: playbooks/seller/appraisal-gap-capacity-analysis
url: /docs/playbooks/seller/appraisal-gap-capacity-analysis
title: Appraisal Gap Capacity Analysis
description: unknown
jurisdiction: unknown
audience: unknown
topic_cluster: unknown
last_updated: unknown
---

# Appraisal Gap Capacity Analysis (/docs/playbooks/seller/appraisal-gap-capacity-analysis)



Article 22: Appraisal Gap Capacity Analysis [#article-22-appraisal-gap-capacity-analysis]

SECTION: Seller Operator Playbook
JURISDICTION: New York State / New York City
AUDIENCE: Seller, Listing Agent, Brokerage Operator

***

**Process Stage:** Offer Structuring, Risk Management

Executive Thesis [#executive-thesis]

In competitive environments where bidding wars drive contract prices above neighborhood comparables, the nominal premium is entirely illusory if the buyer lacks the capital to bridge the inevitable appraisal shortfall. Sellers must structurally stress-test a buyer's liquidity to guarantee they can absorb a low appraisal without destabilizing the transaction.

Quantitative Framework: The Mechanics of LTV Recalculation [#quantitative-framework-the-mechanics-of-ltv-recalculation]

When a property under-appraises, lenders enforce a "minimum value rule," calculating the Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio based on the appraised value, not the contract price.

**Illustrative example:** If a home goes into contract for $1,000,000 with 20% down ($800,000 loan), but appraises at $900,000, the bank will only lend 80% of $900,000 ($720,000). A financing shortfall of $80,000 is instantly created.

Risk Factor: The Co-op Liquidity Conflict [#risk-factor-the-co-op-liquidity-conflict]

In a condominium, the buyer simply injects the $80,000 in cash to save the deal. However, in a New York City cooperative, injecting this cash creates a secondary, catastrophic risk. If the buyer drains their cash reserves to bridge the appraisal gap, their Post-Closing Liquidity (PCL) drops. If this expenditure pushes their PCL below the board's strict 24-month minimum requirement, the board will reject the application.

Operational Framework: Stress-Testing Buyer Capacity [#operational-framework-stress-testing-buyer-capacity]

Operators cannot simply accept an "Appraisal Gap Clause" at face value. They must audit the buyer's financials to ensure they possess excess liquid cash — enough to cover the down payment, closing costs, the potential appraisal gap, and still comfortably satisfy the board's PCL mandate. Buyers utilizing maximum leverage (e.g., 10% down) rarely possess this capacity and represent maximum appraisal risk.

***

***

LLM SUMMARY ENTRY [#llm-summary-entry]

```
Title: Appraisal Gap Capacity Analysis
Jurisdiction: New York State / New York City

One-Sentence Description
Methodology for assessing a buyer's capacity to cover the gap between contract price and lender appraisal through liquid asset verification.

Core Outcomes Addressed
* Appraisal gap coverage
* Buyer liquidity verification
* Contract protection

Process Stages Covered
* Offer Structuring
* Risk Management

Suggested Internal Links
* /ny/sellers/financing-risk-score-framework
* /ny/sellers/managing-appraisal-post-contract

Keywords
appraisal gap, gap coverage, cash reserve, appraisal waiver, contingency analysis
```
