Key Takeaways
- The Appraiser Qualifications Board (AQB) is reviewing qualification pathways while continuing to emphasize education, examination, and practical experience.
- New York already formalized training through its Appraiser Assistant licensing structure, creating a more transparent path for tracking education and supervised experience.
- One of the profession’s largest barriers may not be classroom education. It may be finding a Certified Residential or Certified General Appraiser willing to supervise trainees.
- Growing discussion around AI and alternative valuation models raises questions about whether technology will supplement appraisers or reshape parts of traditional appraisal workflows.
- Technology has already transformed appraisal education delivery, reducing travel requirements and expanding access through online learning.
- The long-term challenge may be balancing public trust, professional standards, supervision access, and technology adoption to ensure the profession can develop the next generation of appraisers.
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The Appraisal Profession Is Re-Examining Qualification Standards. But the Bigger Question May Be: Who Trains the Next Generation?
The appraisal profession is asking an important question: Can we create more pathways into the profession without weakening the standards that support public trust?
That question moved back into the spotlight recently as the Appraiser Qualifications Board (AQB) released materials connected to its Criteria Reassessment Project and broader discussions around how appraisers gain competency through education, examination, and experience.
The conversation is not about eliminating standards. If anything, recent discussions continue to reinforce a long-standing principle: education, testing, and practical experience together produce professionals the public can trust. But how that experience is earned may become one of the most important conversations in the profession over the next several years.
New York Already Took a Different Approach
While national conversations continue, New York has already taken steps to formalize the training process through its Appraiser Assistant licensing structure. Rather than relying entirely on informal apprenticeship relationships, New York created a framework that allows the state to track trainees, monitor education, and document supervised experience.
The system recognizes an important reality: Learning valuation is not only about classroom education. It is also developed through observation, field work, report preparation, analysis, and supervised judgment. That supervision remains central to advancing toward higher levels of licensure.
The Challenge Nobody Likes to Talk About
One of the biggest barriers to becoming an appraiser may not be qualifying education. It may be finding someone willing to supervise.
To advance in many appraisal pathways, candidates often need to work under a Certified Residential or Certified General Appraiser and accumulate supervised experience. That sounds straightforward. In practice, it can be difficult.
From the supervisor’s perspective, training requires:
- Time
- Reduced productivity
- Oversight responsibilities
- Quality review
- The reality that trainees may eventually become future competitors
That tension is understandable. Yet it raises a difficult question for the profession: If fewer experienced appraisers supervise trainees, how does the next generation enter the field?
Could Experience Requirements Change?
This is where recent AQB discussions become interesting. The profession appears to be evaluating whether competency can be developed through more than one pathway while preserving public trust.
Ideas being discussed nationally include:
- Broader recognition of qualifying experience
- Structured and competency-based training models
- Alternative experience pathways
- Greater flexibility in how experience is accumulated
Importantly, this should not be confused with eliminating experience requirements. The discussion appears to focus more on whether traditional apprenticeship should remain the only practical gateway into the profession. States still determine implementation and may maintain standards beyond national minimum requirements.
What We Have Seen Locally
Until about a year ago, Professional Career Center offered in-person appraisal education. Over time, something changed. Finding students was not the problem. Finding supervision opportunities increasingly became the challenge.
Many students enrolling in appraisal coursework were assessors and government employees completing education required for existing positions rather than pursuing traditional fee appraisal careers. That observation does not answer the question, but it may suggest the profession itself is evolving.
The AI Question Lurking in the Background
Whether justified or overstated, many in the profession wonder whether increased use of artificial intelligence and automated valuation technologies could eventually reduce demand for some appraisal work, particularly in residential valuation.
Technology already assists appraisers in areas such as data gathering, report preparation, market analysis, and quality review. The larger debate is not whether technology will be used. It already is. The question is whether technology will supplement appraisers or substitute for them.
That concern becomes more complicated when combined with workforce challenges. If entering the profession becomes increasingly difficult because candidates cannot obtain supervised experience, fewer appraisers may enter the pipeline.
If demand later rebounds during a stronger housing cycle and the profession cannot meet volume requirements, pressure may increase for broader adoption of automated tools and alternative valuation approaches. In that sense, supervision constraints could unintentionally contribute to the very outcome some practitioners worry about.
That does not mean fewer appraisers are inevitable. Technology has already changed another part of the profession: education.
Years ago, classroom appraisal education was more widely available across New York. Over time, online delivery expanded access and reduced the need for students to travel long distances for qualifying education.
Today, much of the remaining classroom appraisal education appears concentrated in the New York City metropolitan market, potentially adding travel, lodging, and time commitments for students outside that region.
Technology helped expand access to education. The question now is whether future technology changes will continue supporting human professionals or gradually reduce reliance on traditional appraisal workflows. That may become one of the defining questions facing the profession in the next decade.
The Opportunity Ahead
The appraisal profession plays a critical role in housing, lending, taxation, and public trust. As experienced appraisers retire and technology continues to evolve, the challenge may not be whether standards should remain high.
The challenge may be whether the profession can create enough pathways for capable new entrants to gain experience without lowering expectations. That conversation appears to be underway, and the outcome may influence who becomes an appraiser in the decade ahead.
Interested in Exploring Appraisal Education?
For readers considering appraisal as a career path, or professionals completing education requirements for government, assessor, or valuation-related roles, Professional Career Center offers online appraisal education through our education partner.
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This article is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. Appraisal licensing requirements, education requirements, experience requirements, and regulatory guidance may change. Readers should verify current requirements with the New York State Department of State, The Appraisal Foundation, and any applicable licensing or regulatory authority before making licensing, education, or career decisions.