Certified Equipment & Machinery appraisals in Virginia for donations, lending, M&A, and financial reporting. AppraiseItNow appraises manufacturing equipment, construction machinery, agricultural equipment, medical devices, and industrial tools online and onsite across Virginia, including Richmond, Virginia Beach, and Norfolk.







AppraiseItNow provides professional equipment and machinery appraisals throughout Virginia for a wide range of purposes, including charitable donations, lending and financing, mergers and acquisitions, and financial reporting. Whether you operate a manufacturing facility in Richmond, a data center in Northern Virginia, a maritime operation in Hampton Roads, or a mining or processing business in rural Virginia, our credentialed appraisers have the industry knowledge to deliver accurate, defensible valuations. Our mission is to deliver defensible, USPAP-compliant valuations with exceptional speed, professionalism, and client service.
We offer both remote and onsite appraisal options to accommodate businesses and individuals across every region of the state, from urban industrial corridors to rural agricultural and processing operations. Our appraisers assess equipment and machinery using the methodology best suited to your specific purpose and situation. We offer Fair Market Value (FMV), Orderly Liquidation Value (OLV), Forced Liquidation Value (FLV), and Replacement Value appraisals for various intended uses.
Our appraisers cover a broad spectrum of equipment and machinery asset classes across Virginia's diverse industrial and commercial sectors, including:
Virginia's unique regulatory environment, which segregates machinery and tools used in manufacturing, mining, processing, and other qualifying industries as a separate class of tangible personal property for local taxation, makes accurate appraisals especially important for businesses operating in these sectors. Our appraisers are familiar with Virginia's machinery and tools tax classifications, including special categories for precision investment castings, national defense manufacturing, and renewable energy production equipment, ensuring valuations are thorough and appropriate for their intended purpose.
AppraiseItNow serves a wide range of clients across Virginia, including business owners, lenders, accountants, attorneys, nonprofit organizations, and corporate finance teams who need credentialed, USPAP-compliant equipment and machinery appraisals for tax compliance, financing, transactions, or reporting purposes.
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 equipment and machinery appraisals throughout Virginia, covering both remote and onsite engagements for businesses, lenders, nonprofits, and individuals.
We appraise a wide range of equipment and machinery, including manufacturing and industrial equipment, construction and agricultural machinery, medical and laboratory devices, printing and processing equipment, and specialty tools. If it has value and can be documented, we can appraise it.
Yes, all AppraiseItNow appraisals follow the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP), ensuring they meet the professional and ethical standards required by the IRS, lenders, courts, and other institutions.
Common purposes include charitable donations, securing financing or loans, mergers and acquisitions, financial reporting, insurance coverage, and estate or tax planning. Virginia businesses also frequently need appraisals for local machinery and tools tax compliance.
Yes, most appraisals can be completed remotely using photographs, specifications, and supporting documentation you provide. Onsite inspections are available when the scope or complexity of the equipment requires a physical review.
Our appraisal fees depend on the scope and complexity of the engagement. Standard single-item appraisals start at $295, Advanced appraisals are $395, and Range appraisals run $695 to $3,000. For volume work, pricing is as follows:
Most remote appraisals are completed in 7 to 10 business days. Onsite inspections or larger collections typically take 2 to 3 weeks from the time we receive all necessary information.
Reports are prepared by credentialed appraisers with specialized expertise in equipment and machinery valuation. Every report is reviewed for USPAP compliance before delivery.
Virginia Code Section 58.1-3507 classifies machinery and tools used in manufacturing, mining, processing, and related industries as a separate category of tangible personal property subject to local taxation only. For property tax purposes, valuation must follow a depreciated cost or percentage-of-capitalized-cost method rather than fair market value, and the commissioner of revenue must consider any bona fide, independent appraisal you submit in writing.
Yes, when donating equipment valued above $5,000 to a qualifying nonprofit in Virginia, IRS rules require a qualified appraisal from a qualified appraiser using fair market value. Our appraisals meet those requirements and include the documentation needed to support your Form 8283 filing.
No, AppraiseItNow is an independent appraisal firm only. We do not buy, sell, or broker equipment, which ensures our valuations remain objective and conflict-free.
To begin, we typically need a description of the equipment, make, model, year, serial numbers, condition notes, and photographs. For larger collections, an asset list or inventory spreadsheet helps us scope the engagement accurately.
Our USPAP-compliant reports are prepared to meet the standards required by the IRS, financial institutions, insurance carriers, and Virginia courts. Acceptance ultimately depends on the receiving party, but our reports are structured to satisfy the documentation and methodology requirements of each major use case.
Virginia treats machinery and tools used in manufacturing, mining, processing, and several other industries as a separate class of tangible personal property taxed only at the local level. For property tax purposes, valuation must use depreciated cost or a percentage of original capitalized cost, excluding capitalized interest, rather than a market-based approach. This means the same piece of equipment may carry different values depending on whether the appraisal is for tax assessment, lending, or insurance purposes.
Idle machinery, defined as equipment discontinued for at least one year or formally identified for planned withdrawal, must be reported to the commissioner of revenue in writing on or before the next return due date. Once classified as idle, the equipment is taxed under different procedures and may defer local taxation until it returns to active use. You should still maintain records of the equipment's condition and original cost, as the commissioner may require an appraisal when the machinery is reactivated.
Virginia property tax appraisals for machinery must use a statutory depreciated-cost method, while bank loan appraisals typically require fair market value and insurance appraisals focus on replacement cost. A single piece of equipment can therefore carry three different appraised values depending on the purpose. Our appraisers clearly specify the applicable valuation standard in each report to prevent misapplication across these different contexts.
Virginia Code Section 58.1-3507 requires that any appraisal submitted to the commissioner of revenue be bona fide and independent, which implies professional standards and objectivity, though no specific credential is mandated by statute. For IRS charitable donation appraisals, federal rules require a qualified appraiser meeting USPAP standards and IRS qualification criteria. Our appraisers document their qualifications, methodology, and independence to satisfy both the state's bona fide requirement and federal standards.
Virginia Code Sections 58.1-3508.3 and 58.1-3508.4 create separate local tax classifications for machinery used directly in precision investment casting and national defense manufacturing. An appraiser must clearly document the equipment's specific function and direct connection to the qualifying process, including design specifications and any repair or replacement parts covered under the classification. Proper documentation ensures the equipment is assessed at the correct rate and avoids misclassification by local assessors.
Virginia law requires 30 days of newspaper notice in the relevant locality before any change to machinery valuation methods takes effect, giving taxpayers advance warning. When a new standard is announced, you should request an updated appraisal that explicitly applies the revised method and submit it to the commissioner of revenue in writing. If you disagree with the commissioner's resulting assessment, Virginia law provides a formal hearing process to challenge it.




