011-9 Wyo. Code R. §§ 9-16 - Qualifications for Present Worth Valuation
(a.) All vacant
land within a platted subdivision may be considered for present worth
valuation; not all vacant land within a platted subdivision will qualify. All
of the following qualifications must be examined before granting present worth
valuation:
(i.) Land Qualifications.
(A.) The property must be located within a
platted subdivision. Land divided through records of survey and other forms of
dividing land does not qualify as a platted subdivision.
(B.) The property must be vacant. Any form of
construction taking place on the individual lot will disqualify the parcel from
present worth consideration. This includes, but is not limited to excavation
for improvement. Smaller, non permanent structures such as, (tool sheds,
moveable trailer, etc.) shall not disqualify the property from present worth
consideration.
(C.) The property's
construction phase must be completed and the lot must be ready to build upon.
All intended infrastructure must be in place.
(D.) The intended property use may be
residential, commercial or industrial. Property to be considered for present
worth must be actively marketed for sale (taxpayer must be able to present
evidence that the property is publicly available for sale as anticipated in the
definition of fair market value).
(E.) The property should be appraised using
present worth valuation only if the property is being sold as fee simple
property. Property intended to be leased or being leased should not be
considered for present worth valuation.
(F.) The present worth value of any given lot
shall never be less than the value of raw land. Raw land is the lowest value;
and in those cases where a long absorption period or high rate allows the
indicated present worth value to drop below raw land, present worth shall not
apply.
(G.) Subdivision
infrastructure will vary within each development and where it is located. The
appraiser/assessor needs to understand what is to be provided based on the
location of the property and that infrastructure provided to similarly situated
property. If any lots within a subdivision lack something that has been
provided to other lots within the subdivision, then those lots are not ready
for construction and are not eligible for present worth valuation.
(H.) Present worth may be applied regardless
of the size of the subdivision.
(I.) Lots that have the complete
infrastructure but cannot be built upon for other reasons (steep grade, trees,
etc.) should not be given a present worth value.
(J.) Ag land shall not be considered for
present worth valuation.
(K.) Lots
gifted to friends or family must not be considered for present worth valuation.
In addition, those lots may not be considered in the formula of calculating an
absorption period.
(ii.)
Applicant Qualifications.
(A.) The applicant
must be the owner of the vacant lots and be actively marketing the property for
sale. Those lots that are gifted to friends and family members, or those to be
used for his/her own personal use will not qualify as that individual is an end
user.
(B.) The property owner must
annually request present worth valuation in writing. The applications will be
developed by the DOR and shall be available in each County Assessor's
office.
(C.) Builders or investors
who purchase groups of lots within a subdivision may apply for present worth
valuation. Builders and investors differ from individuals who buy lots for
their own use in that they are not the eventual end user.
(D.) The applicant must not be the end user
of the property to be considered for present worth valuation. By purchasing a
lot to build a house, no matter how long it takes to build the house, the
applicant has become an end user of the property. Builders and investors of
lots with the intent to resell are not considered end users and can apply for a
present worth valuation.
(E.) The
applicant must be relying on the sale of lots for profit or reimbursement of
funds invested.
(iii.)
Absorption Period or Rate.
(A.) The
absorption period must be greater than one year to qualify for present worth
valuation. An absorption period of less than one indicates that all remaining
lots will be sold within a one year period. When the absorption period becomes
less than one year all remaining lots should be valued at full fair market
value.
(B.) Often times in
subdivision development a developer will sell several lots prior to completing
the infrastructure. These "presales" should be counted as sales of the first
month of the absorption period.
(C.) To correctly apply present worth values
an absorption period must be obtained which, specifically defines the time
period as starting at the initial offering of the lots and ending when all lots
are sold. More importantly, it is an estimate of the time frame needed to
market the inventory to the eventual end users. The assessor may consider
granting a separate absorption period for each owner of land within a
development. Much like developers, builders and investors will face the task of
selling an inventory of lots over time and at least in part recouping their
initial investment and making a profit through the sale of those
lots.
(D.) The lots being
considered for present worth valuation must be of the same use. If multiple
uses exist within a subdivision, the lots should be separated for analysis as
those different uses will account for different absorption periods.
(iv.) Discount Rate.
(A.) The Department of Revenue (DOR) will
annually provide a discount rate that shall be used in the CAMA software. This
rate will be developed by the DOR, or will be provided through nationally
recognized rate services and appraisal companies. The DOR shall provide the
rate to be used by the counties by January
31st.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.