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Working Paper 17-02: Property Renovations and Their Impact on House Price Index Construction

Published: 3/24/2017
Author:

​​​Alexander N. Bogin, Senior Economist; William M. Doerner, Senior Economist

​Abstract:

This paper provides the first wide-scale analysis of property renovation bias in repeat-sales house price indices across a multitude of U.S. geographies.  Property improvements frequently lead to positive quality drift.  In local markets, omitting information on property improvements can bias index estimates upwards.  Bias often varies in a predictable manner and can distort valuations by as much as 15 percent in the central districts of large cities.  This systematic variation in bias is partially a function of the disparate concentration of renovation activity with property improvements occurring more frequently in denser areas.  The distortionary effect of not accounting for property renovations tends to decline outside of downtown areas and is generally negligible in smaller cities (populations below 500,000).

This research was selected as the best paper in 2017 in real estate valuation by the American Real Estate Society. A revised version of this paper has undergone external peer-review and is published in an academic journal. Citation: Alexander N. Bogin, William M. Doerner. 2019. "Property Renovations and Their Impact on House Price Index Construction." Journal of Real Estate Research, 41(2), 249-283. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10835547.2019.12091526

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