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B4-1.4-10, Value Acceptance (06/03/2026)

Introduction
This topic contains information about value acceptance, including:

Overview

For certain loan casefiles, DU offers value acceptance, in which case an appraisal is not required. For loan casefiles that are not eligible for value acceptance, DU will require an appraisal reported on the appropriate appraisal report form for the type of property being appraised.


Prior Appraisal Requirements

For value acceptance to be considered, generally a prior appraisal must be found for the subject property in Fannie Mae’s Collateral Underwriter (CU) data. When required, DU will compare the address for the subject property to the property addresses found in CU. DU will use the information from the prior appraisal to determine if the loan casefile is eligible for value acceptance. In some cases, the prior appraisal may not be acceptable. For example, if a CU “Overvaluation Flag” was issued on the prior appraisal, or the appraisal could not be scored, that prior appraisal will not be used and value acceptance will not be offered on the new loan casefile.


Eligible Transactions

A value acceptance offer will be considered for the following transactions:

  • one-unit properties, including condos;
  • principal residence and second home transactions;
  • investment property refinance transactions;
  • certain purchase, limited cash-out, and cash-out refinance transactions; and
  • DU loan casefiles that receive an Approve/Eligible recommendation.

Ineligible Transactions

The following transactions are not eligible for a value acceptance offer:

  • two- to four-unit properties;
  • co-op units and manufactured homes;
  • proposed construction;
  • construction-to-permanent loans (single-close and two-close);
  • HomeStyle Renovation and HomeStyle Refresh loans;
  • leasehold properties;
  • Texas Section 50(a)(6) loans;
  • community land trusts or other properties with resale price restrictions, which include loan casefiles using the Affordable LTV feature;
  • transactions where either the purchase price or estimated value provided to DU is $1,000,000 or more;
  • transactions using gifts of equity;
  • DU loan casefiles that receive an Ineligible recommendation; and
  • manually underwritten loans.

Note: DU may offer value acceptance on a recently constructed property (i.e., new construction) when there is an existing “as is” prior appraisal for the subject property. For example, an appraisal of the subject property may have been performed for a different lender or borrower, but that loan did not close. The lender may execute the value acceptance offer when the loan meets all other eligibility criteria for the transaction.

Furthermore, the lender may not exercise a value acceptance offer and must order an appraisal if one or more of the following applies:

  • DU was unable to identify ineligible criteria in the list above (for example, Texas Section 50(a)(6) loans);
  • the lender is required by law to obtain an appraisal (see A3-2-01, Compliance With LawsA3-2-01, Compliance With Laws);
  • the lender is using rental income from the subject property to qualify the borrower; or
  • the lender believes that an appraisal is warranted based on additional information the lender has about the property or subsequent events.

Note: The lender may not exercise a value acceptance offer if an appraisal is obtained for the transaction.

See  B5-7-02, High LTV Refinance Underwriting, Documentation, and Collateral Requirements for the New LoanB5-7-02, High LTV Refinance Underwriting, Documentation, and Collateral Requirements for the New Loan for additional information about high LTV refinance value acceptance.


Representations and Warranties

When a loan casefile is eligible for value acceptance and the offer is exercised by the lender, Fannie Mae accepts the value estimate submitted by the lender as the value for the subject property. See A2-2-06, Representations and Warranties on Property ValueA2-2-06, Representations and Warranties on Property Value for more information.


Exercising Value Acceptance

A lender may only exercise value acceptance if

  • the final submission of the loan casefile to DU resulted in a value acceptance offer,
  • an appraisal is not obtained for the transaction, and
  • the value acceptance offer is not more than four months old on the date of the note and the mortgage.

Lenders that elect to exercise value acceptance must include SFC 801 at delivery. Lenders may not adversely select against Fannie Mae in determining which value acceptance offers to accept. Fannie Mae may monitor the lender’s exercise of value acceptance offers and delivery of loans to Fannie Mae, and may take appropriate measures if adverse selection is identified.


Uniform Appraisal Dataset (UAD) 3.6 Policy

Lenders using UAD 3.6 must follow the requirements in the UAD 3.6 Policy Supplement.


Recent Related Announcements

The table below provides references to recently issued Announcements that are related to this topic.

AnnouncementsIssue Date
Announcement SEL-2026-06 June 03, 2026
Announcement SEL-2025-10 December 10, 2025
Announcement SEL-2025-07 September 03, 2025
Announcement SEL-2025-04 June 04, 2025
Announcement SEL-2023-02March 01, 2023
Announcement SEL-2022-10December 14, 2022
Announcement SEL-2020-03June 03, 2020
Announcement SEL-2019-07August 07, 2019