A complex appraisal is one that relies to any significant degree on all three (3) approaches to value (cost, sales comparison and income approaches) or is an appraisal that has at least one of the following characteristics:
No appraisal experience credit will be allowed for a complex appraisal unless all three (3) approaches to value are fully developed in the report.
Examples: a complex, non-residential appraisal (up to 66 hours of credit) may contain any of the following: income capitalization approach; income expense analysis; building-land residual technique; leased fee-leasehold interest; absorption rate; discounting to present value; highest and best use is not the current use; itemized accrued depreciation; unit-in-place method or quantity survey method in the cost approach; site or vacant land using the allocation method, abstraction method, subdivision development method, or land residual method; appraisal requires the appraiser's use of data obtained from a professional who is not an appraiser; a use of property that has no comparable sales with the same use; a property covered by the Environmental Protection Agency; a conservation easement; an appraisal that requires the before and after values. Other valuations may qualify as determined by the Appraisal Board.
Note: A complex residential appraisal (up to 24 hours of credit) is a 1 to 4 unit appraisal similar to Fannie Mae Form 1004/Freddie Mac Form 70 but it will include the GRM income approach; Fannie Mae Form 1025/Freddie Mac Form 72; Fannie Mae Form 1072/Freddie Mac Form 465; Fannie Mae Form 1075/Freddie Mac Form 466; or a narrative report. In all cases, compliance with the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) is required.
30 Miss. Code. R. 1501-2.7