IRS-qualified furniture appraisals in Louisiana for donations, estate tax, divorce, and probate. AppraiseItNow appraises antique furniture, bedroom sets, dining room sets, office furniture, and upholstered pieces online and onsite across Louisiana, including New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and Shreveport.







AppraiseItNow provides professional furniture appraisals throughout Louisiana for a wide range of purposes, including charitable donations, estate tax filings, divorce proceedings, and probate matters. Whether you need a qualified appraisal to satisfy IRS requirements for a non-cash donation exceeding $5,000 on Form 8283, a fair market value determination for an estate tax return on Form 706, or a defensible valuation for a divorce settlement or probate court, our credentialed appraisers deliver accurate, well-documented reports that meet the standards required by attorneys, accountants, courts, and federal agencies. Our mission is to deliver defensible, USPAP-compliant valuations with exceptional speed, professionalism, and client service.
AppraiseItNow serves clients across Louisiana with both remote and onsite appraisal options, making it easy to obtain a professional valuation regardless of your location or schedule. Remote appraisals are completed using photographs and documentation you submit online, while onsite appraisals allow our appraisers to inspect pieces in person for complex or high-value collections. As a recognized provider of personal property appraisals, we offer Fair Market Value (FMV), Replacement Value, and Actual Cash Value (ACV) appraisals for various intended uses.
Our appraisers evaluate a broad spectrum of furniture across residential, commercial, and antique categories throughout Louisiana, including:
Whether you have a single heirloom piece or an entire household or commercial inventory, our appraisers have the expertise to assess condition, provenance, and market value accurately. Louisiana's rich cultural heritage, particularly in New Orleans and the surrounding parishes, means that antique and regionally significant furniture often requires specialized knowledge to appraise correctly, and our team is equipped to handle those nuances.
AppraiseItNow serves individuals, families, attorneys, estate administrators, financial advisors, businesses, and nonprofit organizations throughout Louisiana who need credentialed furniture appraisals for legal, financial, tax, or insurance purposes. From homeowners settling an estate in Baton Rouge to commercial property managers filing annual LAT-5 business personal property returns, we provide reliable valuations tailored to each client's specific needs.
Given the USPAP-compliant nature of AppraiseItNow’s appraisal reports, we prepare our deliverables for major legal, tax, and financial reporting purposes for individual and commercial clients.
Popular uses of our appraisal reports include:
No Frequently Asked Questions Found.
Yes, AppraiseItNow provides certified furniture appraisals throughout Louisiana, covering everything from single heirloom pieces to large estate or business collections. Our appraisers are experienced with the full range of furniture types found across the state and deliver USPAP-compliant reports accepted by the IRS, courts, and insurers.
We appraise antique and vintage furniture, contemporary and designer pieces, office and commercial furniture, and full household collections. Whether you have a single armoire or an entire estate's worth of furnishings, we have the expertise to value it accurately.
Yes, all AppraiseItNow furniture appraisals follow the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP). This ensures your report meets the standards required by the IRS, insurance companies, courts, and financial institutions in Louisiana.
The most common purposes we serve in Louisiana include charitable donation documentation, estate tax filings, divorce asset division, and probate proceedings. Appraisals are also requested for insurance coverage, damage claims, and business personal property tax assessments.
Yes, we offer remote appraisals for furniture throughout Louisiana using photographs and documentation you submit online. For larger collections or situations requiring a physical inspection, we can arrange onsite appraisals as well.
Our furniture appraisal fees in Louisiana are structured by scope and complexity:
Contact us to discuss which tier fits your needs.
Most remote furniture appraisals in Louisiana are completed within 7 to 10 days. Onsite appraisals or larger collections typically take 2 to 3 weeks from the time we receive all necessary information.
Your report is prepared by a qualified appraiser with expertise in personal property and furniture valuation. All appraisers working through AppraiseItNow follow USPAP guidelines and carry credentials from recognized professional organizations such as the American Society of Appraisers or the Appraisers Association of America.
Louisiana does not have a state licensing requirement specific to personal property or furniture appraisers, unlike real estate appraisers who are regulated by the Louisiana Real Estate Appraisers Board. Furniture appraisers rely on national accreditations and USPAP compliance, which are the recognized standards for credibility in Louisiana courts, tax proceedings, and insurance matters.
Yes, we prepare qualified appraisals for furniture donations valued over $5,000, as required for IRS Form 8283. Our reports include all required elements: a detailed description of the item, the valuation method used, the effective date, and the appraiser's qualifications, meeting federal standards without any additional Louisiana-specific requirements.
No, AppraiseItNow is strictly an appraisal firm. We do not buy, sell, or broker furniture, which means our valuations are fully independent and free from any conflict of interest.
To begin a furniture appraisal in Louisiana, we typically need clear photographs of each piece, any known provenance or purchase records, the purpose of the appraisal, and basic details such as dimensions, maker's marks, or condition notes. The more documentation you can provide, the more accurate and efficient the process will be.
Yes, our USPAP-compliant reports are prepared to meet the acceptance standards of the IRS, insurance carriers, and Louisiana courts. We tailor each report to its intended purpose, whether that is a Fair Market Value determination for donations or estate tax, a Replacement Value for insurance, or an Actual Cash Value for damage claims or divorce proceedings.
Louisiana does not mandate state licensing for personal property appraisers valuing furniture, in contrast to real estate appraisers who must meet strict education and experience requirements through the Louisiana Real Estate Appraisers Board. Furniture appraisers instead rely on national credentials and USPAP compliance to establish their qualifications.
Louisiana assessors use the cost approach on LAT-5 forms to value business personal property like office furniture for ad valorem taxes, applying acquisition cost, age, economic life, and standardized depreciation schedules under Louisiana Administrative Code Title 61, Part V, Chapter 25. Business owners file LAT-5 reports annually detailing these elements for assessment purposes.
Yes, Louisiana business owners can challenge the standardized depreciation tables assessors use for furniture by submitting independent appraisals or market data as evidence through LAT-5 filings or Board of Review appeals. Proposed 2026 rule changes may require this evidence to be submitted before Board of Review deadlines, so acting early is important.
Proposed 2026 revisions by the Louisiana Assessor's Association would restrict appraisal evidence in tax appeals to data available before Board of Review deadlines, which could limit the admissibility of furniture appraisals submitted after that point. Business owners disputing personal property assessments should obtain and share appraisal documentation with assessors well before those deadlines to preserve their appeal rights.
Under Louisiana's 2025 insurance rules from Act 625 of 2024, appraisers involved in furniture damage claims must have at least three years of experience in their licensed profession, training in property damage estimation, and hold an active state license as an adjuster, contractor, engineer, architect, or similar professional. Registration through the Louisiana Department of Insurance's Industry Access portal carries a $55 fee.




