Keller Williams Realty New Orleans

Appraisal Overhaul: What NOLA Agents Must Know

Market Intelligence  ·  Appraisals & Contracts

Nichole Donald, Co-Broker at KW New Orleans, on the sweeping changes coming to the appraisal process — and why the 30-day contract you’ve been quoting buyers may no longer be a safe promise to make.

A quiet but significant overhaul is coming to the way homes get appraised in America — and most real estate professionals, including many at the industry association level, are only now beginning to understand its reach. The changes touch everything from how long an appraiser spends in a home, to which data fields appear in your MLS, to whether your standard contract timeline still holds water.

Nichole Donald, Co-Broker at KW New Orleans, attended an appraisal roundtable hosted by NOMAR specifically to get ahead of the changes — and brought back intelligence that every agent working deals in the Greater New Orleans market needs to hear before it hits.

Nichole Donald
Co-Broker — KW New Orleans
Nichole Donald didn’t wait for a memo to land in her inbox. When word started circulating about changes in the appraisal world, she went straight to the source — showing up at a NOMAR appraisal roundtable to sit alongside appraisers and hear the details firsthand. That kind of proactive intelligence-gathering is a throughline in how she operates. As Co-Broker at KW New Orleans, she works at the intersection of contracts, compliance, and agent education, helping the brokerage stay ahead of the procedural shifts that can quietly derail transactions. She’s the person in the room who asks the question everyone else assumed someone else would ask.

The appraisal industry is undergoing its most significant structural change in decades. Driven by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the shift moves appraisers from a paper-based workflow to a mandatory digital platform — with a November 2, 2026 compliance deadline. For agents, the ripple effects reach directly into contract timelines and daily transaction management.

01
100+ new data fields. Appraisers will be required to collect significantly more property data per inspection, including ceiling heights in individual rooms and condition ratings for each space — details that were previously optional or omitted entirely.
02
Paper to digital. The entire appraisal data collection system is moving to a new digital platform. The old paper-driven workflow will no longer be accepted by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac once the requirement takes effect.
03
Inspection time expanding dramatically. What currently takes 10 to 15 minutes in a home is expected to stretch to at least an hour under the new data collection requirements — a change with direct consequences for scheduling and contract timelines.
04
MLS transition overlap. New Orleans agents are facing this appraisal overhaul simultaneously with a planned fourth-quarter MLS migration. NOMAR is coordinating with appraisers to ensure the new MLS includes required data fields — such as ceiling height — to reduce duplication of effort across both systems.

Most realtors, including Nomar, really didn’t know the extent of the changes that are happening in the appraisal world.

— Nichole Donald, Co-Broker, KW New Orleans

The practical impact agents will feel first is on closing timelines. The standard 30-day contract has long been a comfortable default in the New Orleans market — but with appraisers spending significantly more time per property and adapting to a new platform, that window is expected to stretch. Donald’s advice: stop quoting hard timelines to buyers and sellers until the market adjusts and actual data emerges.

The old habit of ordering an appraisal five days before closing is, simply put, no longer viable. Donald recommends treating appraisal ordering with the same urgency as the inspection period — ideally placing the order within a day of inspection completion. Lenders are expected to begin implementing the new system 30 to 45 days ahead of the November 2 deadline, meaning the transition is already underway for deals closing in the fall.

The days of get order and appraisal five days before closing, or whatever, is not going to happen.

— Nichole Donald, Co-Broker, KW New Orleans

Jeffrey Doussan took the operational implication one step further: this is a moment for listing agents to stop passively trusting that the buyer’s lender has ordered the appraisal. He argues that verification needs to become part of the standard listing agent workflow — not just a polite follow-up, but a documented confirmation directly from the lender.

His position is that a written confirmation — an email from the lender confirming the appraisal was ordered and the scheduled inspection date — should become a non-negotiable step. With appraisal delays now capable of adding two or more weeks to a transaction, listing agents who let this slide are absorbing risk on behalf of their sellers. The additional remarks section of the listing may be the right place to set expectations explicitly from the start.

I need to know that you ordered the appraisal, and I need to hear it from the bank… I want an email from them saying, yes, the appraisal was ordered. They’re going out this date, like that. It’s done.

— Jeffrey Doussan, Operating Principal, KW New Orleans

One point of relief from the roundtable: the longstanding practice of listing agents meeting appraisers with comparable sales and property documentation remains acceptable and, if anything, will be more valuable than before. With appraisers carrying a heavier data burden, a well-prepared comp package from the listing side reduces friction and supports a faster conclusion.

What remains an open question is cost. Appraisal pricing is set individually by each appraiser, and while the roundtable discussion didn’t yield a firm answer, the logic is straightforward: more time in the property, more data to enter, and a new platform to learn will put upward pressure on fees. Agents should be prepared to have that conversation with clients before a number is quoted in a buyer consultation.

The Bottom Line

Nichole Donald went to a roundtable so her agents wouldn’t be caught flat-footed — and what she found was that most of the industry is still in the dark. The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac appraisal overhaul, effective November 2, 2026, will expand in-home inspection time from minutes to roughly an hour, add more than 100 new required data fields, and push the entire system onto a new digital platform — all while New Orleans agents are simultaneously migrating to a new MLS. The move: order appraisals immediately after inspection, get written confirmation from lenders, and stop promising buyers a 30-day close until the market shows you what the new normal actually looks like.


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AppraisalsFannie MaeContract TimelinesNew Orleans Real EstateNOMARMLS MigrationListing Strategy

Disclaimer: This article is provided for general informational purposes only and reflects a summary of a public conversation. It is not legal advice, public safety guidance, or a guarantee of outcomes. Laws, policies, and crime trends can change, and individual situations vary. For questions about legal matters, consult a licensed attorney. For real estate questions, consult a licensed real estate broker, and verify any neighborhood-specific concerns through appropriate official sources.