
Most people only think about valuations when they’re forced to. A bank asks for one during a bond application. An insurance claim requires one. A divorce settlement needs assets valued. An estate has to be wound up. The valuation itself is often treated as a box-ticking exercise, something to get done and filed away. But a proper valuation is a lot more than a number on a piece of paper. It’s a professional opinion backed by methodology, market data, and experience that can have serious financial and legal consequences.
In South Africa, the need for accurate valuations touches almost every sector of the economy. Property, businesses, equipment, vehicles, art, jewellery, and agricultural assets all need to be valued at various points. Getting it wrong, or getting a sloppy valuation from someone who isn’t properly qualified, can cost people and businesses a lot of money. Overpaying for an asset, underinsuring a property, or accepting an unfair settlement in a dispute are all consequences of a bad valuation.
Who Does Valuations and Why Qualifications Matter
Valuators are professionals who have been trained and accredited to determine the market value of assets. The title isn’t something anyone can claim. Qualified valuers hold recognised qualifications, have completed practical training, and are registered with professional bodies that hold them to specific standards of practice and ethics.
Certified valuators have gone through a formal certification process that demonstrates their competence in a specific field of valuation. This certification matters for several reasons. It means the valuation report they produce will hold up under scrutiny, whether that’s from a bank, an insurer, a court, or SARS. A valuation done by someone without proper credentials can be challenged, rejected, or thrown out entirely, leaving the person who paid for it back at square one.
Certified valuations carry weight precisely for this reason. They follow established methodologies, they reference comparable market data, and they’re produced by someone who can defend their findings if questioned. For anything involving significant money, a legal dispute, or a regulatory requirement, a certified valuation isn’t optional. It’s the baseline.
What a Valuation Company Does
A valuation company brings together qualified professionals who specialise in different asset classes. Property valuers, business valuers, plant and machinery valuers, and specialist valuers for items like art, antiques, and vehicles all work under one roof or within one network. This means a client who needs multiple types of assets valued can get everything done through a single point of contact rather than chasing down separate specialists for each category.
Valuation companies that operate at a professional level will have internal quality controls. Reports get reviewed before they go out. Methodologies are standardised. Data sources are current and verified. This kind of structure is what separates a professional valuation from a guess dressed up as a report.
The range of valuation services available in South Africa is broad. Residential property, commercial property, industrial property, agricultural land, businesses, machinery, vehicles, household contents, art, jewellery, and more. Each category has its own approach, its own data requirements, and its own set of variables that affect value. A residential property valuation looks at location, size, condition, and recent comparable sales. A business valuation looks at revenue, profits, assets, liabilities, and market position. A machinery valuation looks at age, condition, remaining useful life, and replacement cost. The methodology changes depending on what’s being valued, and that’s why specialists exist.
When Independent Valuations Matter Most
There are situations where an independent valuations report isn’t just useful but necessary. Divorce settlements are a common example. When assets need to be split, both parties need to agree on what those assets are worth. An independent valuation removes the argument. The number comes from a qualified third party with no interest in either side, and it gives both parties and the court a credible basis for the settlement.
Estate planning and deceased estate wind-ups are another area where independent valuations are critical. SARS requires accurate asset values for estate duty purposes, and executors need to know what the estate is worth to distribute it fairly among beneficiaries. Getting this wrong can result in tax penalties, family disputes, and legal complications that drag on for years.
Insurance is a third area. Underinsurance is one of the biggest problems in South Africa. People insure their property or contents for what they paid years ago, not what it’s worth now. When a claim comes in, the insurer pays out based on the insured value, not the replacement value. A proper valuation at the time of taking out or renewing a policy prevents this problem entirely.
The Role of RICS in South Africa
RICS valuations refer to valuations carried out in accordance with the standards set by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. RICS is a global professional body that sets and enforces the highest standards in property and asset valuation. Having a valuation done to RICS standards means it meets international benchmarks for quality, accuracy, and professionalism.
RICS valuers in South Africa are qualified professionals who have met the institution’s rigorous entry requirements and are bound by its rules of conduct. For cross-border transactions, multinational corporations operating in South Africa, or any situation where the valuation needs to be recognised internationally, a RICS-compliant report is the gold standard.
Valuation Advisory Beyond the Report
Valuation experts don’t just produce reports. Many also provide advisory services that go beyond putting a number on an asset. Valuation advisory services can include portfolio analysis, asset optimisation advice, tax planning support, dispute resolution input, and strategic guidance on acquisitions or disposals.
For businesses, this advisory function is particularly valuable. Knowing what an asset or a portfolio of assets is worth is one thing. Understanding how to maximise that value, when to sell, when to hold, and how to structure a deal is where advisory services add a layer of insight that a standalone report doesn’t provide.
The valuation industry in South Africa is well-established and well-regulated. The professionals working in it are qualified, experienced, and accountable. For anyone who needs to know what something is worth, whether it’s a house, a factory, a business, or a painting, the right starting point is always a qualified valuer and a properly conducted valuation. The cost of getting it done right is a fraction of the cost of getting it wrong.