Best HOALife Alternative for Self-Managed HOAs
TLDR
HOALife built a good violation management system and then handed accounting to QuickBooks. For a self-managed board that needs reserve fund separation and fiduciary documentation, QuickBooks inherits every limitation QuickBooks has always had with HOA-specific fund accounting. BoardStack keeps everything in one place and enforces fund separation from day one.
Quick Verdict
HOALife built a good violation management system and then handed accounting to QuickBooks. For a self-managed board that needs reserve fund separation and fiduciary documentation, QuickBooks inherits every limitation QuickBooks has always had with HOA-specific fund accounting. BoardStack keeps everything in one place and enforces fund separation from day one.
| Feature | HOALife | BoardStack |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | $45-$95/mo | $20–$99/mo |
| Setup fee | Varies | $0 |
| Reserve fund compliance | No | Built-in, state-specific |
| Fund accounting | No reserve separation | True fund isolation |
| Owner portal | Limited | Full self-service |
| Built for | Professional management | Volunteer boards |
BoardStack offers reserve fund compliance and true fund accounting at $20–$99/mo with zero setup fees, vs. HOALife at $45-$95/mo.
What HOALife does well
HOALife built a mobile-first violation workflow that inspectors and board members can actually use on a phone. You can walk the property, photograph violations, create notices, and track the resolution timeline without sitting down at a computer. For communities where covenant enforcement is the main board activity, HOALife is well-designed.
The QuickBooks Online integration means existing users of QBO can connect their accounting without switching platforms.
The QuickBooks dependency problem
HOALife’s accounting story is “use QuickBooks.” That works fine for general small business accounting. It does not work well for HOA-specific requirements.
QuickBooks has no concept of reserve funds versus operating funds. A board treasurer using QBO for HOA accounting has to manually enforce fund separation through chart of accounts conventions, which requires accounting knowledge most volunteer board members do not have. When the treasurer changes, those conventions are rarely documented, and the next person inherits a chart of accounts they did not design.
Reserve study tracking in QuickBooks is a spreadsheet problem. You get the study from the engineer, enter the targets somewhere, and then track progress manually. QuickBooks has no reserve balance dashboard, no reserve contribution rate calculator, and no disclosure report for unit sales.
The real combined cost
If you use HOALife for violations and QuickBooks for accounting:
- HOALife: $45-$95/mo
- QuickBooks Online Simple Start or Essentials: $30-$60/mo
- Combined: $75-$155/mo, two logins, two platforms to learn, no reserve fund integration between them
BoardStack charges $20–$99/mo for a single platform that covers violations, accounting, reserve tracking, and homeowner communications.
Who should switch
If your board is running HOALife for violations and a spreadsheet or QuickBooks for finances, the gap between those two systems is where compliance risk lives. BoardStack closes that gap.
If violations are genuinely your only problem and reserve compliance is not a concern in your state or community, HOALife is a reasonable choice.
PROS & CONS
HOALife
Pros
- Mobile-first violation inspection workflow with photo documentation
- Straightforward violation notice generation and resolution tracking
- Native QuickBooks Online integration for boards already using QBO
Cons
- No true fund separation between operating and reserve accounts — delegates accounting to QuickBooks, which has no HOA reserve concept
- Requires a separate QuickBooks subscription, adding $30-$60/mo to total cost
- No reserve study tracking or reserve balance dashboard
Does HOALife handle reserve fund accounting?
No. HOALife outsources accounting to QuickBooks Online via integration. QuickBooks does not natively separate HOA operating and reserve funds or track reserve study targets. Boards end up managing HOA-specific compliance requirements inside general-purpose small business accounting software, which requires manual discipline rather than system enforcement.
What is the total cost of HOALife with QuickBooks?
HOALife charges $45-$95/mo depending on community size. QuickBooks Online adds $30-$60/mo. Combined, boards pay $75-$155/mo with two separate platforms and no integration between violation tracking and reserve accounting.
Source: HOALife pricing page
Does HOALife handle reserve fund accounting?
What is HOALife best used for?
Is HOALife cheaper than BoardStack?
Can BoardStack replace both HOALife and QuickBooks?
Ready to protect your board?
Get started freeReady to switch?
- State-specific compliance
- No setup fees
- Flat $20–$99/month
Related Comparisons
HOALife Pricing Breakdown (2026): What You Actually Pay
HOALife costs $45-$95/mo but requires QuickBooks Online for accounting, adding $30-$60/mo. The real cost of running HOALife is higher than the subscription alone.
Why QuickBooks does not work well for HOA accounting
QuickBooks is built for for-profit businesses. HOA accounting uses fund accounting. The mismatch creates commingling risk, compliance gaps, and a lot of manual work.