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For lending purposes, banks require a value that holds up even in economically difficult times – which is why they calculate more cautiously than in a market-oriented market value determination.

The basis is often the German Mortgage Lending Value Regulation (BelWertV), which excludes speculative market components and instead focuses on sustainably achievable income and values.

For sale or tax purposes, the market value is always decisive – the mortgage lending value only plays a role in loan granting and collateralization.

The mortgage lending value generally remains unchanged over the entire term of the loan, whereas the actual market value may shift upward or downward depending on market developments.

This deliberately conservative calculation by banks explains why the mortgage lending value accepted by a bank for financing purposes is often lower than the value determined in the market value appraisal.