Site icon Blog

HOA Pros & Cons: Are They Worth It?

So you’ve narrowed down your search to a particular location and have started looking at homes there. You’re open to several types of homes, including condos and townhouses with homeowners associations (HOAs). But how do you know if living in a place with an HOA is right for you?

Let’s take a look at the pros and cons of an HOA… are they worth it?

What is an HOA?

Homeowners Associations (or HOAs) are organizations made up of property owners in a condo building, subdivision, or planned community. Owners’ collective interests are represented through the HOA and owners pay dues that cover the costs of operation and for maintaining reserves.

The HOA members elect a board of directors from their membership that serves as the governing/managing body for the HOA. All condos have HOAs since they all have common areas that all owners and residents have an interest in maintaining.

What do HOAs do?

The full extent of what HOAs do is highly variable and dependent on the specific condo building, subdivision, or common interest development.

At the most basic level, however, all HOAs will set rules and regulations on what owners can or cannot do with their property, assess and collect fines for rules violations, and collect HOA dues.

Depending on the HOA, these dues can go towards things like paying for maintaining common areas (like landscaping for a shared garden or running a community pool), repairing exteriors and roofs, paying outside managers to administer the day-to-day aspects of the HOA on behalf of the board, paying vendors to provide services like window washing or private trash collection, purchasing insurance for common areas and association property, paying for members’ utilities, paying insurance premiums, and contributing towards reserves.

HOA dues are commonly assessed based on a property’s size (especially for condos and townhouses), but may also be a flat fee for all owners (more common in subdivisions and planned communities).

What are some pros of HOAs?

What are some cons of HOAs?

What should I look out for when evaluating an HOA?

Before you close on a home, you should make sure that you are given the opportunity to review the HOA documents by setting up a contingency. When looking through the documents, pay close attention to the:

If any of these bring up problems, you will need to closely think about whether the property and its HOA makes sense for you. Remember, the HOA is not optional– even if the property itself is perfect, a bad HOA or one with problems can mean a less-than-pleasant living experience, or difficulty reselling the property later.

So should I move into this place with an HOA?

That depends on your own personal preferences. Are you happy to make the cost and flexibility trade-off for access to amenities and services? Do you want to live in a cohesive community with agreed-upon rules, or would you rather live someplace where you have more of a say in what you can or can’t do in your property? Could you absorb the HOA dues fees if they increased? The answers to those questions can help you decide whether to go through with the purchase of the $800/month HOA dues condo.

READ NEXT: The Potential Roadblocks To Know When Closing on a Home

Exit mobile version