Usually not. While a receipt or purchase invoice can be helpful documentation, it is not the same as an appraisal and often does not provide the information needed for insurance coverage, estate planning, charitable donation, equitable distribution, or resale planning.
A receipt simply reflects what was paid at a particular moment in time. It does not account for changes in the market, identify the correct type of value needed, or include enough detail to properly describe the property. In many cases, receipts are also incomplete, outdated, or tied to a retail transaction that does not reflect current value.
A qualified appraisal, by contrast, is an independent, well-researched opinion of value prepared for a specific intended use. It considers the relevant market, appropriate methodology, and the characteristics of the object itself. It also provides the documentation needed to support the value conclusion if it is ever questioned by an insurer, tax authority, fiduciary, or other interested party.
Receipts are useful pieces of the puzzle, but they are rarely a substitute for a professional appraisal. If the asset is important enough to insure, donate, divide, or plan for, it is usually important enough to value properly.
