Bank: Hawaii Real Estate
Appraiser Law Exam
Mastery Report
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
● PART I: THE PRIMER
○ The Foundational Mandate & Legislative Context
○ Regulatory Thresholds & Disciplinary Metrics
○ The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
○ Tier 1 (Questions 1–28) - Foundational Syntax & Application: Examining "Hard
Deck" definitions, primary statutes, and core frameworks including scope of practice
(HAR 16-114), Record Retention, and AMC registration thresholds (HRS 466M).
○ Tier 2 (Questions 29–58) - Complex Application & Simulation: Bridging clinical
scenarios with legal compliance, focusing on SMA permit triggers, arbitration
mandates (HRS 466K-6), nonconforming coastal repair caps, and supervisory
ratios.
○ Tier 3 (Questions 59–88) - Grandmaster Synthesis: Resolving multi-variable
crises requiring the synthesis of shoreline setback mathematics (SB723), leasehold
rent renegotiation formulas, and complex RICO disciplinary limits.
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastery of this exhaustive jurisprudence and regulatory framework translates directly into elite
legal compliance, ensuring the appraiser operates flawlessly within the jurisdiction of Hawaii. By
bridging raw administrative statutes with real-world execution, the practitioner establishes a
legally impenetrable, highly effective appraisal practice that meets both state and federal
oversight standards. The Hawaii real estate market is unique, governed by extreme
geographical constraints, coastal vulnerability, and strict agricultural preservation mandates.
Appraisers must synthesize standard USPAP principles with localized Hawaiian law, treating
environmental setbacks, land tenure variations, and stringent credentialing boundaries as
absolute operating parameters.
Regulatory Thresholds & Disciplinary Metrics
,To operate at an elite level, an appraiser must instantly recall the statutory limits that define their
scope of practice and environmental operating conditions. The following tables synthesize the
most critical quantitative thresholds governing Hawaii appraisal practice.
Credential / Entity Statutory Scope & Threshold Citation
Limit
State Licensed Appraiser (SLA) Non-complex 1-4 residential up HAR 16-114-70
to <$1,000,000; Commercial up
to <$250k.
Certified Residential Appraiser All 1-4 residential (no limit); HAR 16-114-71
(CRA) Commercial up to <$250k.
Appraiser Trainee Max 3 trainees per qualified HAR 16-114
supervisor (3 years certified).
Appraisal Management Panel size > 15 locally OR ≥ 25 HRS 466M-5
Company (AMC) nationally.
Environmental & Legal Operational Metric / Formula Citation
Framework
SMA Minor Permit Cap ≤ $500k (Shoreline) / ≤ $750k ROH § 25-5.2
(Non-Shoreline).
Shoreline Setback Formula ((Avg Lot Depth - 100) / 2) + SB723
40. Min 40ft (rocky)/60ft (other).
Max 100ft.
Nonconforming Coastal Repair Max 50% of replacement cost SMA Rules
over 10 years if within 60ft of
shoreline.
Record Retention 5 years from delivery OR 5 HAR 16-114-94
years from final disposition of
litigation.
The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● The Scope Hard-Decks: Scope boundaries dictate competency. Operating above
statutory transaction value limits voids licensure protections and triggers Regulated
Industries Complaints Office (RICO) discipline.
● Arbitration Supremacy (HRS 466K-6): An appraiser acting as an arbitrator MUST
supply findings of fact, rationale, USPAP certification, and data methodologies in the
written award record.
● Leasehold Rent Formula: Renegotiated lease rent equals the market value of the raw,
unencumbered land multiplied by the negotiated fair market rate of return, apportioned by
the lessee's percentage interest.
● Agricultural Preservation (HRS 205): Class A and B soils are the untouchable vault of
Hawaii agriculture, explicitly restricted from urban sprawl to ensure food security, and
must be taxed strictly on agricultural use value regardless of highest and best use.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
,Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: An appraiser holding a State Licensed Appraiser (SLA) credential is offered an assignment
for a non-complex single-family dwelling with an estimated transaction value of $1,200,000.
Based on HAR 16-114-70, which action is the MOST APPROPRIATE? A) Accept the
assignment, as SLAs can appraise 1-4 family residential properties up to $1.5M. B) Accept the
assignment but include a limiting condition regarding the transaction value. C) Decline the
assignment, as SLAs are restricted to transaction values up to, but not including, $1,000,000 for
non-complex residential properties. D) Accept the assignment if a Certified General Appraiser
signs the supervisory block.
● The Answer: C (Decline the assignment, as SLAs are restricted to transaction values up
to, but not including, $1,000,000 for non-complex residential properties.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The statutory limit for SLAs on non-complex residential is firmly set
below $1M.
○ B is incorrect: Limiting conditions cannot bypass state statutory credential limits.
○ D is incorrect: An SLA cannot merely co-sign to bypass the transaction value limit if
they are the primary appraiser of record without the supervisor taking primary
responsibility.
The Mentor's Analysis: Statutory scope limits are absolute. An SLA is strictly bound by the
sub-$1M ceiling for non-complex 1-4 family units. Professional/Academic Intuition: Scope
boundaries dictate legal competency; operating above statutory limits constitutes
unlicensed activity for that tier.
Q2: A Certified Residential Appraiser delivers an appraisal report on March 1, 2026. On January
10, 2030, the appraiser receives a subpoena indicating the report is involved in ongoing civil
litigation. When does the record retention period IMMEDIATELY expire? A) March 1, 2031,
strictly following the 5-year federal mandate. B) Five years from the date of the final judicial
disposition of the litigation. C) January 10, 2035, tolling five years from the date of the
subpoena. D) Seven years from the original delivery date, per state exception.
● The Answer: B (Five years from the date of the final judicial disposition of the litigation.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Standard retention is five years, but active litigation suspends and
alters this timeline.
○ C is incorrect: The clock resets upon the final disposition of the litigation, not the
notification date.
○ D is incorrect: There is no blanket seven-year rule in HAR 16-114-94.
The Mentor's Analysis: HAR 16-114-94 dictates that litigation pauses the standard expiration.
The retention clock remains frozen until the court issues a final ruling, after which a new
five-year countdown begins. Professional/Academic Intuition: Litigation resets the retention
clock to final disposition plus five years.
Q3: A State Certified General Appraiser intends to run a print advertisement in a local Honolulu
magazine. According to HAR 16-114-99, what specific detail is MANDATORY in this media? A)
The appraiser’s physical office address. B) The appraiser’s license or certificate number. C) A
disclaimer regarding USPAP compliance. D) The associated Appraisal Management Company
(AMC) registry number.
● The Answer: B (The appraiser’s license or certificate number.)
● Distractor Analysis:
, ○ A is incorrect: While good practice, a physical address is not strictly mandated by
the advertising rule.
○ C is incorrect: USPAP disclaimers are reserved for the appraisal report, not
marketing media.
○ D is incorrect: Individual appraiser advertising does not require AMC registry data.
The Mentor's Analysis: Hawaii law mandates absolute transparency in marketing. Any person
advertising through any media must explicitly list their specific state license or certificate
number. Professional/Academic Intuition: No license number in the advertisement equates
to a violation of public trust.
Q4: Beginning January 1, 2026, a Hawaii appraiser preparing for license renewal must fulfill a
new continuing education requirement regarding Valuation Bias. For the FIRST time completing
this requirement, what is the mandated course length? A) 3 hours B) 4 hours C) 7 hours D) 15
hours
● The Answer: C (7 hours)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Three hours reflects an outdated, generic CE modular approach.
○ B is incorrect: Four hours is the requirement for subsequent renewal cycles, not the
initial completion.
○ D is incorrect: Fifteen hours refers to the initial USPAP qualifying education
requirement.
The Mentor's Analysis: The AQB 2026 criteria enforces a rigorous initial baseline for Fair
Housing and Bias training. The first exposure must be a comprehensive 7-hour block, dropping
to 4 hours in subsequent cycles. Professional/Academic Intuition: Initial bias training requires
seven hours; ongoing maintenance requires four.
Q5: Under Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 466M, an Appraisal Management Company (AMC)
is defined by the size of its appraiser panel. What is the statutory minimum threshold to be
regulated as an AMC? A) More than 10 appraisers in Hawaii, or 20 nationally. B) More than 15
appraisers in Hawaii, or 25 or more appraisers in two or more states. C) Exactly 15 appraisers
globally. D) More than 25 appraisers in Hawaii exclusively.
● The Answer: B (More than 15 appraisers in Hawaii, or 25 or more appraisers in two or
more states.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: This undercounts the federal and state threshold.
○ C is incorrect: The statute requires more than 15 locally, and accounts for
multi-state panels.
○ D is incorrect: This ignores the multi-state panel criteria established by Dodd-Frank
and adopted by Hawaii.
The Mentor's Analysis: Hawaii's AMC registration program aligns with federal Dodd-Frank
thresholds. An entity escapes AMC regulation only if it maintains a highly localized, small-scale
panel. Professional/Academic Intuition: The AMC regulatory floor is 16 locally or 25
nationally.
Q6: An appraiser is valuing agricultural land in Hawaii. The soil is classified by the Land Study
Bureau as overall productivity rating Class A. Under HRS 205-4.5, which use is EXPLICITLY
RESTRICTED from this land without a special permit? A) Cultivation of crops for bioenergy. B)
Single-family farm dwellings accessory to the farm. C) Public utility transformer stations. D)
Overnight recreational camps.
● The Answer: D (Overnight recreational camps.)
● Distractor Analysis: