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How Much Money Should There Be In Our Condo Reserve?


A typical question I am asked is “what is required to be in a condo reserve"?  Well according to the condo association law it would be what is “adequate”. No offense to the real estate lawyers out there but that seems a bit vague. Rightfully so.

There is not way to come up with a one system fits all formula. My opinion would be the more money in condo reserves the better. Condo Associations should budget each month to put money from condo fees aside for the future replacement of common areas and facilities. How much is determined by the size of the property and the amount of condo association common areas that will need attention down the road.

The best way to determine this is to have a reserve study specialist or engineer provide you with a reserve study. This reserve study will determine the expected lives of your HOA or condo association common area facilities. The heating system, the roof, the siding, the chimney, light fixtures, interior painting, etc. It will then apply future costs to each element and determine what needs to be put aside each year to meet these goals for you condo association.

For smaller condo associations this can be cost prohibitive. Trustees or condo boards could develop their own version of a condo reserve study by obtaining pricing on the larger association common area elements and adding a lifespan to them. I have seen many Condo Board designed plans that have been very complete and accurate.

If the condo association is professionally managed, your property manager could assist the condo board in developing this type of reserve study with the condo association board. Be prepared to pay an additional fee to the property management company for this type of work since it is outside the scope of most contracts.

Get to know who lives at in the condo association or HOA. This is important on many levels and could come in handy to do a self designed condo reserve study, HOA reserve study or other types of projects. You may have an engineer, architect, contractor, lawyer, accountant or one of many other professions that do not have time to be a condo association board member but are very willing to be involved on a condo management committee.

How much should you have in condo reserve? You have enough money in a condo reserve if you can address a condo association common area or facility issue without having to implement a special assessment. That would be my definition of adequate.

In my state of Massachusetts, a Condo Association Replacement Reserve Fund is a separate and segregated portion of the common condo reserve funds or the organization of condo unit owners which shall be used to replace, restore, or rebuild common areas and facilities. 

In Section 10 (i) it states that "All Condominiums shall be required to maintain an adequate replacement reserve fund....." Section 10 (m) it allows on an annual basis for sixty seven percent (67%) in beneficial interest or more, may modify this provision. 

If your condo association does not have enough in condo reserve for projects, consider an HOA Loan or Condo Association Loan.

Scott D. Wolf, PCAM
President
Greater Boston Properties, Inc.
www.gbproperties.com

Comments

Reserves are No mystery to develop one is easy.
You do need someone experienced in the maintenance of Buildings and property after that it is all down hill.
Select the amount of an item you want to build a reserve for say 10,000, any item 10000 or more will be placed on the reserve schedule.
Estimate the life span remaining vs the useful life
say asphalt lot
useful life 20 years, cost to replace projected 20 years from now $100,000
present life used 10 years
you should have 50, 000 in reserves and the balance divided by 10 or $5000 per year for the next 10 years.
Your reserves should be updated every two years.
Simple, you do not need expensive engineers charging you thousands of dollars a day, or reserve specialists that will charge you ten of thousands to conduct a reserve budget.
This is no secret , it is useful life ( life span from new) vs used life span and the balance remaining
Any association wanting a base model please feel free to contact us at our site. Please provide a name and number along with your e-mail
Posted @ Wednesday, March 26, 2008 11:24 AM by Admin
Please send along a model for calculating reserves for condo association. We have a 54 unit located with 4 buildings.
Posted @ Monday, April 07, 2008 5:49 PM by John Mele
John
Please contact us at
info@condospecialties.com and we will forward you a copy by e-mail.
If local we can call, to assit you and fax the model you we are in SE Florida
you may also go towww.condospecialties.info and review the resources it is a free site
Posted @ Tuesday, May 27, 2008 3:56 PM by Paula
Paula,
I just happen to be in need of a Reserve Study Analysis know-how. Would you be kind to send along a model? I checked condospecialties.com but could not find a model there. You assistance will be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Posted @ Tuesday, June 03, 2008 2:23 PM by KB
Please contact us and we will send you a general format
If you provide your phone number and location we will not only send the reserve outline but call you if you wish and offer some additional information in regards to your needs based on location and other factors
info@condospecialties.com
Posted @ Wednesday, June 04, 2008 3:30 PM by Paula Maffeo
Please send a model for calculating reserves for a condo association. We have 127 units. Thanks
Posted @ Tuesday, June 10, 2008 4:49 PM by Charles Steidinger
We are trying to establish a budget for our condos in Western PA. Currently we have ten buildings containing 40 units with a potential of 88 units in the next thre years. The owners are responsible for all repairs from the drywall in. We would like to establish a condo fee and a long term budget and reserve.
Thanks for your help.
Posted @ Saturday, June 14, 2008 12:05 PM by Dennis Gaggii
PLEASE we have received dozens of requests for a reserve study outline.
Responding from this site provides a NOreply e-mail address.
If you want us to reply to your request please provide YOUR email address within the e-mail you send us so we can respond to you.
We will not post it on our site as we are a company and this is part of how we make our living.
For those small communities or communities that cannot afford our services we will send you a factual outline FREE of charge or obligation
Thank you
Posted @ Saturday, June 14, 2008 9:03 PM by Paula
Please NOTE an operating budget and a
reserve budget are two different things.
We can do an operating budget for you or we can do a reserve budget for you and yes we do charge for our services.
However we do have a free reserve study for smaller communities or those that cannot afford our services at no cost or obligation.
But please we cannot provide any community details on an operating budget without complete details.
Any association requesting a reserve study guide e-mails us with your e-mail included so we can respond.
We do travel nation wide,Canada and the Caribbean to assist associations.
Please read above and then respond with your questions we will attempt to answer or respond accordingly.
Thank you
Paula
Posted @ Saturday, June 14, 2008 9:13 PM by Paula
Dear Mr. Charles Steidinger
We do not have your e-mail, there is no link to you here How do we contact you?
Paula
Posted @ Saturday, June 14, 2008 9:15 PM by Paula
We are concerned about reserve. We have a good idea on operating expenses but at this time we need to know how to project costs. We know what current (2008)replacement cost are. Right now after 3 years we are spending 75% of our condo fee on operational costs and putting 25% in reserve.
Posted @ Saturday, June 14, 2008 9:36 PM by Dennis G.
Dear Dennis
You did not place your e-mail in your response.
Please forward to info@condospecialties.com
So we may forward the study guide.
Not knowing your equipment, when you were built, type of community and the actual age, I can only provide the reserve study guide.
Thanks
Paula
Posted @ Sunday, June 15, 2008 8:42 AM by Paula
Please answer my posts to dagaggini@zoominternet.net
Dennis G.
Posted @ Sunday, June 15, 2008 12:38 PM by dennis G
To All
We have received dozens of requests for the reserve study. Please provide your e-mail address in your request.
Responding from this site sends us a NOREPLY @ address.
Thank you.
We would like to answer all of you but cannot if we do not have an address or at lease a phone number, we do not give out or sell any information in regards to your requests.
Paula
Posted @ Wednesday, June 18, 2008 7:23 AM by Paula
Some of you have requested the reserve study guide and feel it is too complicated, please look at the first posting here
"Posted @ Wednesday, March 26, 2008 11:24 AM by Admin"
This is the easy way.
It is not complicated we are working on a fill in the blanks form to assist in developing a basic reserve budget.
Thank you all for your e-mails Paula
Posted @ Wednesday, June 18, 2008 7:28 AM by Paula
If two people own one unit each in a two-unit condo association in MA and have different percentages and decide to build a two-car garage, each unit getting one space, must they pay for the garage according to their ownership percentages, or can they agree to split all costs associated with the garage evenly, since their use of the garage will be 50/50?
Posted @ Wednesday, June 25, 2008 2:14 PM by Logan
We have 80 townhouses and the owners are about to take over the HOA from the developers. We would very much appreciate a model. Thanks.
Posted @ Monday, July 07, 2008 3:45 PM by John Wilson
Dear Mr. Wilson 
We cannot contact you with a noreply@ address. 
Please forward your e-mail and advise us of the age of the community, location near water or ocean etc.. 
the more you provide the more we can assist. 
There is no charge for the study or addition comments. 
Thank you 
Paula
Posted @ Monday, July 07, 2008 4:26 PM by Paula
We found some good articles on reserve studies at: http://www.neighborhoodlink.com/article/Association/
Posted @ Sunday, August 17, 2008 1:39 PM by Bill Wyman
Hi, 
 
What do you think if finacing for repaires would include combination of reserve fund and special assessments? Would you recommend a ratio?  
 
 
 
Thanks.
Posted @ Monday, December 01, 2008 4:24 PM by Vladimir
I cannot comment on your request as I do not know what state your in, however I do not believe it is legal to assess for reserves., Unless you have the 65% rule. 
You may assess for repairs but you have to build your reserves. 
We have the condo statutes listed for the US, Canada, and costa rica 
I suggest you review them, before you get yourself (the Board) in trouble.Please review your state statutes atwww.condospecialties.info 
 
For those of you seeking a reserve study you may also go to the same site, we have received so many requests that we have placed it on our site, for specific questions contact us . 
Thanks 
Admin
Posted @ Monday, December 01, 2008 5:41 PM by Admin
The links mentioned above are dead. Where can the "Building Bible" be obtained?
Posted @ Friday, May 01, 2009 1:50 PM by W.O.
This information this guy is offering is as useless as the posting itself. To put together a RS using this clowns advise is like performing cataract surgery on your self. Just take a laser and point it in your eye and squeeze. Give me a break. It is this type of advise that has the condo industry in the situation it is in. Do the right thing, hire a professional.
Posted @ Sunday, August 23, 2009 1:57 PM by Larry
Please send your reserve study model. We are a 200+ high rise in NE Florida but because of a hastily departed developer we are just barely holding on. R4ply to popculp@aol.com
Posted @ Friday, October 16, 2009 12:22 PM by Charles Culp
A proper reserve budget requires more than the number of units or appoximate age to complete correctly. The best course of action is to have the property evaluated fully. This is a process that does not need to be expensive but needs to be done accurately. Undefined common area and property costs can lead to extra fees or special assessments for the condo owners.  
 
LM Consultants provides full reserve studies and can also perform update studies when needed. If we can help in providing a clear reserve budget and remove some of the anxiety or concern over properly allocating those funds, please let us know.  
 
 
 
Brian Wielgus 
 
Brian_Wielgus@LMConsultants.co.m
Posted @ Monday, November 09, 2009 1:40 PM by Brian Wielgus
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