Condition levels in home valuation
Understand the seven condition levels in Home valuation — from Poor condition to Connoisseur — what each level means, how they are calibrated against real transactions, and which one to choose.
Home valuation gives you an AI price estimate across seven condition levels — from Poor condition to Connoisseur — so you can see what the same home is worth in different states. Each level is calibrated against real, registered transactions in exactly the area the home is located. This article explains what the seven levels mean and how to choose the right one.
1The seven condition levels
Once a valuation is calculated, seven price estimates appear side by side — one per condition level. You pick a level by clicking its card; the highlighted card drives the shown Price Estimate.
Hover a card to see the full description of the level. Each card shows both DKK/m² and Total price for the home in that exact state.
2What each level means
The descriptions are built around upkeep, degree of renovation and material quality:
Poor condition — kitchen, bathroom, floors and installations are worn or outdated. Below average — habitable but visibly worn; some rooms need updating. Average condition — normally maintained, neither newly renovated nor worn down — equals the area average. Above average — well-maintained with updated surfaces and good upkeep. Very good — newer kitchen/bathroom and consistently high quality. Perfect condition — newly renovated or near-new with top quality materials and craftsmanship. Connoisseur — designer kitchen, luxury finishes and unique character; top of the market in the area.
Average condition is the reference point. The other levels sit systematically above or below it, so you can always see your home's position relative to the area average.
3How the level affects the price
The condition levels are not fixed percentage add-ons. They are calibrated against real percentiles in the comparable, registered transactions in the area — that is, the actual price spread between worn-down and top-maintained homes right there.
This means the price gap between neighbouring levels depends on the area: in a market with wide quality spread the jump between levels is larger than in a homogeneous neighbourhood. The estimate for each level builds on the same time-adjusted transactions — only the percentile shifts.
If in doubt, start at Average condition and move one level at a time. The description and the price jump to the neighbouring level help you land it correctly.
4Which level should you choose?
Choose based on the home's actual state — not the price you hope to sell for:
- Buyer perspective: assess conservatively. Visible wear and older installations pull toward Below average or Poor condition.
- Seller perspective: Perfect condition and Connoisseur require demonstrable top quality — full renovation, designer details, unique character.
- Ordinary home: most well-kept homes land at Average condition or Above average.
- Compare scenarios: click through the levels to see how a renovation could lift the value — the gap between Average condition and Very good shows the realistic potential.