BPO (Broker Price Opinion)
A property value estimate prepared by a licensed real estate broker or agent, faster and cheaper than a full appraisal. Lenders use BPOs on some bridge and hard money loans to value collateral quickly.
A broker price opinion (BPO) is an estimate of a property's value prepared by a licensed real estate broker or agent rather than a certified appraiser. It's a middle ground between a full appraisal and an automated estimate — faster and cheaper than an appraisal, but more hands-on and credible than an AVM.
How a BPO is done
The broker evaluates the property — sometimes with an interior inspection (interior BPO), sometimes just from the curb and photos (exterior/drive-by BPO) — and analyzes recent comparable sales and active listings to form a value opinion. The result is a concise report with the broker's estimated value and supporting comps, typically delivered in days, not weeks, for a fraction of an appraisal's cost.
Why lenders use BPOs
Speed and cost. On loans where a full appraisal would be too slow or expensive relative to the deal, a BPO gives the lender a reasonable, defensible value quickly:
- Bridge and hard money loans — where closing in days is the whole point, a BPO can value the collateral fast enough to keep pace.
- Portfolio and bulk valuations — pricing many properties at once.
- Default / REO situations — lenders order BPOs to price distressed assets for disposition.
For a DSCR purchase or refinance, lenders usually still require a full appraisal; the BPO shows up more on short-term, asset-based loans where speed dominates.
BPO vs. appraisal vs. AVM
| Method | Who prepares | Speed | Cost | Rigor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appraisal | Licensed appraiser | Days–weeks | Highest | Highest |
| BPO | Real estate broker | Days | Moderate | Moderate |
| AVM | Software/algorithm | Instant | Lowest | Lowest |
What investors should know
- It's an opinion, not a certified appraisal. A BPO carries less weight than an appraisal and isn't accepted for every loan type — but for fast bridge financing it's often sufficient.
- Quality varies with the broker. A diligent broker pulling good comps gives a reliable number; a rushed drive-by BPO can be off. As with any valuation, the comps drive the result.
- Useful for your own analysis. Investors sometimes commission a BPO as a cheap second opinion on value before buying or refinancing — quicker and less expensive than an appraisal when you just need a sanity check.
Understanding when a lender will accept a BPO (and when they'll insist on a full appraisal) helps you anticipate both the cost and the timeline of getting a loan closed.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between a BPO and an appraisal?
A BPO is a value estimate from a licensed real estate broker, while an appraisal is a certified valuation from a licensed appraiser. The appraisal is more rigorous, more expensive, and accepted for more loan types; the BPO is faster and cheaper, used where speed matters, like bridge and hard money loans.
Do lenders accept a BPO instead of an appraisal?
For some loans, yes — particularly short-term bridge and hard money loans where closing fast is the priority. For DSCR purchases and refinances, lenders usually require a full appraisal. Whether a BPO is accepted depends on the lender and loan type, so confirm up front when speed matters.
How accurate is a broker price opinion?
It depends on the broker and whether it's an interior or drive-by BPO. A diligent broker pulling solid comparable sales produces a reliable estimate; a rushed exterior-only BPO can be less precise. As with any valuation, the quality of the comparable sales used drives the accuracy.