Understand HOA dues, reserve funds, special assessments, and what makes a community financially healthy โ before you buy or as a current resident.
For: Buyers & residentsEvery HOA manages two separate funds, and understanding the difference is critical for evaluating a community's financial health.
Operating Fund Funded by monthly dues. Covers day-to-day expenses: landscaping, pool maintenance, common area utilities, insurance on shared structures, and management fees. An operating deficit in the current year is a warning sign.
Reserve Fund Set aside for major future replacements โ roofing, paving, elevators, pool resurfacing, exterior painting. Think of it as the HOA's savings account. A healthy reserve prevents sudden, large special assessments when big repairs come due.
HOA dues vary widely โ from under $100/month to over $1,000/month โ depending on community size, amenities, and location. In Coral Springs, expect to see:
Know exactly what's included before comparing fees across communities. A community with $800/month dues that includes cable, internet, and water may be cheaper all-in than a $400/month community where you pay those separately.
The reserve study is the HOA's financial roadmap. It estimates the remaining useful life and replacement cost of every major component โ and recommends how much to set aside each year.
How to read it:
| Funding % | What It Means |
|---|---|
| 70%+ | Healthy โ lower risk of special assessments |
| 50โ70% | Moderate risk โ watch the upcoming repair schedule |
| Below 50% | Higher risk โ special assessment is more likely |
| Below 25% | Significant risk โ assess carefully before buying |
Florida law does not require HOAs to be fully funded, but it does allow members to vote to waive or reduce reserve contributions โ which shifts the risk to future homeowners.
When the reserve fund isn't enough to cover a major repair or unexpected expense, the board levies a special assessment โ a one-time charge to all homeowners, on top of regular dues.
How they happen:
Amounts can be significant. Depending on the repair and the number of units sharing the cost, special assessments can range from a few hundred to tens of thousands of dollars per unit. In older Coral Springs communities with deferred maintenance, they can exceed $50,000 per homeowner.
Always ask about pending and recently voted assessments before closing. Florida FS 720.401 requires sellers to disclose these.
Florida Statute 720 allows HOA boards to increase dues by up to 115% of the prior year's budget without requiring a member vote. Larger increases require membership approval.
Understand the historical rate of dues increases in any community you're considering. A community that raises dues 8% annually will double your monthly payment in about 9 years.
Questions to ask:
Look for these indicators when evaluating a community's financial standing:
Positive signs:
Red flags:
Use the directory to compare communities before you commit to one.