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Buying Into a Florida HOA

The due diligence checklist every Florida home buyer needs before closing on a property in an HOA community โ€” documents, finances, red flags, and your legal rights.

For: Home buyers

What Is an HOA?

A homeowner association (HOA) is a private organization that manages a residential community. When you buy a home in an HOA community, you automatically become a member and are legally bound by its governing documents โ€” including rules, dues obligations, and architectural standards.

In Coral Springs, HOAs range from small condominium associations with 20 units to large planned communities with 500+ homes. They exist to maintain common areas, enforce community standards, and manage shared infrastructure.

HOAs are governed by the state of Florida (primarily FS 718 for condos, FS 720 for HOAs), the community's own governing documents, and the elected board of directors.


Before You Buy: The Disclosure Packet

Florida law requires sellers to provide buyers with a disclosure packet containing:

You have 3 business days to rescind the purchase contract after receiving this packet. Request it as early in the process as possible โ€” don't wait for closing day.


Governing Documents

Every HOA is governed by a hierarchy of documents. Higher-level documents supersede lower ones when there's a conflict.

  1. Declaration of Covenants, Conditions & Restrictions (CC&Rs) โ€” The foundational legal document, recorded with the county. Defines what homeowners can and cannot do with their property.
  2. Bylaws โ€” Govern how the HOA operates: board structure, elections, meeting requirements, and voting procedures.
  3. Rules and Regulations โ€” Day-to-day rules covering parking, pets, noise, pool hours. Amended more frequently than CC&Rs.
  4. Architectural Guidelines โ€” Standards for exterior modifications: paint colors, landscaping, structures, fencing.

Pay particular attention to rental restrictions, pet rules, parking, exterior modification approval processes, and any unusual use restrictions before buying.


Reserve Fund Health

The reserve fund is the HOA's savings account for major future repairs โ€” roofing, paving, pool resurfacing, elevators. A well-funded reserve reduces the risk of sudden large special assessments.

How to evaluate it:


Special Assessment History

Ask for 3โ€“5 years of board meeting minutes. Special assessments can appear unexpectedly when reserves are insufficient for a major repair. Past assessments reveal:

A history of repeated or large special assessments is a serious red flag.


Verify the Management Company

All Florida community association managers must be licensed by the DBPR. An unlicensed manager is a red flag for how the community is being run.

Look up the management company at myfloridalicense.com. Search under "Community Association Manager" and confirm the license is active.


Review the Board Meeting Minutes

Board meeting minutes reveal more than any glossy brochure. Look for:

Request at least 3 years of minutes. If the HOA is reluctant to provide them, that reluctance itself is a red flag.


Buyer Due Diligence Checklist

Before closing on an HOA property in Coral Springs, confirm you have:

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Florida HOA law changes frequently. Consult a licensed Florida real estate attorney before closing on any HOA property.

Browse Coral Springs HOA Communities

Use the directory to compare communities before you commit to one.