The Expert Appraisal Company provides USPAP-compliant personal property appraisal services to clients throughout North Carolina, including Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Asheville, Greensboro, Chapel Hill, Winston-Salem, and surrounding areas. Whether you need an appraisal for estate settlement, insurance coverage, charitable donation, divorce, or litigation support, we provide accurate, defensible valuations prepared by an ISA Certified Appraiser of Personal Property.
Many appraisals can be completed remotely using photographs and documentation provided by the client, with no in-person visit required. For complex or large-scale assignments, on-site inspections are available throughout North Carolina and nationwide.
Our appraisals cover a wide range of personal property, including fine art (paintings, prints, sculpture, and works on paper), antiques and decorative arts, estate jewelry and watches, furniture and furnishings, silver and ceramics, rugs and textiles, books and manuscripts, collectibles, and furniture, fixtures, and equipment (FF&E).
To discuss an appraisal engagement in North Carolina contact us using the form or reach out directly. We are happy to answer questions, provide a fee estimate, and outline the process for your specific situation.
Exploring North Carolina's Collector Scene
North Carolina has a growing arts infrastructure anchored by the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, which holds significant collections of American, European, and ancient art on an expanded campus that includes extensive outdoor sculpture. The Mint Museum in Charlotte holds important collections of American and European decorative arts and craft, with particular strength in pottery and ceramics, reflecting the state’s significant studio pottery tradition in the Seagrove area. The Ackland Art Museum at UNC Chapel Hill helps round out the state’s institutional landscape.
Estate collections in North Carolina frequently include American paintings, North Carolina and Southern folk art, studio pottery from the Seagrove tradition, where hundreds of pottery families have worked since the 18th century, and works by the significant community of contemporary artists who have settled in the Research Triangle and Asheville. Asheville has emerged as a nationally recognized art destination, with galleries representing painters, ceramicists, and woodworkers whose work appears in regional estate inventories. Formal USPAP-compliant appraisals for such assets are regularly required for estate settlement, insurance, and charitable donation purposes throughout the state.
