Sample report preview
Professional appraisals
A signed appraisal report for a real decision.
Order a signed Appraisily report for art, antiques, collectibles, insurance, donation, estate, resale, or documentation decisions. Evidence, comparables, and human review are included.
Proof before purchase
Inspect the deliverable, not just the claim.
Sample reports are the strongest public proof layer because they show what the appraisal output contains and how a value conclusion is explained.
Trust proof
What the report is built to show
Object evidence reviewed
Photos, labels, signatures, marks, condition, history, and measurements shape the research path.
Market support selected
Comparable sales and category context are selected for the object and the stated use case.
Use-case value framing
Insurance, donation, estate, resale, and documentation decisions can require different report language.
Signed report output
The final PDF includes the value conclusion, reasoning, limitations, and shareable documentation.
Choose by decision
Concrete report lanes
Standard signed report
For general documentation, resale planning, inherited objects, collection records, and a clearer value decision.
Insurance report
For replacement-value context, scheduling conversations, and updating coverage documentation.
Donation and tax review
For fair-market-value context, CPA review, and Form 8283 conversations when applicable.
Estate and collection review
For multi-item decisions, family division, downsizing, consignment planning, or documenting a group of objects.
Turnaround and escalation
Fast when the evidence is clear. Careful when it is not.
- ✓Checkout shows the current timing choice before payment, including 24-hour rush when it is available and the standard 48-hour option when selected.
- ✓Unclear attribution, weak photos, missing dimensions, or unusual condition can trigger a request for more evidence.
- ✓Complex, high-value, donation, estate, or multi-item files may need custom quote review or extra coordination.
- ✓If the evidence cannot support a confident conclusion, the report should say what is limited rather than overclaim.
Evidence method
How a report gets built
Photos and object clues
Clear images, marks, labels, signatures, condition details, dimensions, and provenance notes give the reviewer something real to inspect.
Comparable market evidence
Relevant sales are weighed against medium, date, size, condition, attribution confidence, and the stated purpose of the report.
Human review and reconciliation
A reviewer checks the research path, value conclusion, and wording before the finished report is delivered.
Documented output
The client receives a report that explains the conclusion, not just a number or an automated screen.
Boundaries
Clear limits make the report stronger.
- ✓The screener is a first read. The signed report is the documented appraisal deliverable.
- ✓Auction records are inputs. The customer outcome is a usable appraisal decision, not auction search.
- ✓A report is an informed value opinion, not a promise that an object will sell for that number.
- ✓Photos can support strong review, but authentication or condition questions may still require additional evidence.
- ✓Institution-specific acceptance rules still control whether a third party accepts a report for its own process.
Decision support
The report should make the decision clearer.
Each page should help the visitor understand what evidence is reviewed, what the signed report contains, and why a documented appraisal is the right next step.
Start with the object. Leave with a documented decision.
Upload photos, share the context, and get a signed report built around evidence and human review.