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AppFolio vs PayHOA for HOA boards (2026)

Last updated: March 20, 2026

TLDR

AppFolio costs $280-$400/month base plus $6-8/unit, requires a 50-unit minimum, and is built for professional property management firms. PayHOA starts at $49/month and is built for self-managed HOA boards. Unless you manage a large portfolio of properties professionally, AppFolio is the wrong tool.

Feature AppFolio PayHOA BoardStack
Monthly cost $280-$400/mo + $6-8/unit $49-$199/mo $20–$99/mo
Reserve fund compliance No No Built-in, state-specific
Built for Professional management Professional management Volunteer boards

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Cost comparison

For a 100-unit self-managed HOA, the cost difference is significant.

AppFolio: $280-$400/month base, plus $6-8/unit in platform fees. That works out to $880-$1,200/month for 100 units. AppFolio also enforces a 50-unit minimum, so smaller communities cannot use it at all.

PayHOA: $49-$199/month flat, depending on the feature tier you need. No unit-based pricing. A 100-unit HOA on PayHOA’s most expensive tier still pays less than AppFolio’s base price alone.

The cost gap is not a close call. AppFolio’s pricing structure assumes a professional management company that spreads the cost across dozens of client properties. A single self-managed HOA absorbs the full cost from community dues.

Feature relevance

AppFolio has a deep feature set: maintenance tracking, tenant portals, owner distributions, leasing workflows, portfolio analytics. These features exist because property management companies need them. A self-managed HOA board needs none of them.

What you need is: homeowner dues collection, violation management, financial reporting, document storage, and board meeting support. PayHOA covers all five. AppFolio covers them as well, buried inside a platform designed for a different job.

Support quality

AppFolio has a reputation for slow and inconsistent support. For a professional management company with in-house staff, that is manageable. For a volunteer board member trying to pull a report at 9pm before a board meeting, it is not.

PayHOA’s support is oriented toward HOA boards with simpler questions, not complex portfolio management issues.

What neither tool addresses

Both AppFolio and PayHOA lack reserve fund compliance tracking. Neither connects your reserve balance to your reserve study’s funding targets. BoardStack is built around that gap: it gives your board visibility into reserve adequacy and generates the compliance reports that state law increasingly requires.

AppFolio vs PayHOA Feature Comparison

Side-by-side comparison of key HOA management features

FeatureAppFolioPayHOA
HOA-specific designNo (property management)Yes
Reserve fund accountingNoNo
Operating/reserve fund separationNoNo
Pricing modelPer unit ($6-8/unit/mo + $280 base)Flat tiers ($49-$199/mo)
Unit minimum50 units requiredNone
Online dues collectionYesYes
Resident portalYesYes
Self-managed board supportNoYes

PROS & CONS

AppFolio

Pros

  • Comprehensive feature set for professional property managers
  • Advanced accounting and multi-entity reporting
  • Strong maintenance tracking and work order management

Cons

  • 50-unit minimum excludes smaller communities
  • Costs $880-$1,200/month for a 100-unit HOA
  • Built for property managers, not volunteer boards

PROS & CONS

PayHOA

Pros

  • Purpose-built for HOA boards with HOA-specific terminology
  • Flat pricing with no unit-based fees
  • Accessible interface for volunteer board members

Cons

  • No reserve fund compliance tracking
  • Less accounting depth than AppFolio
  • Limited reporting for complex financial needs

Which is better for self-managed HOA boards, AppFolio or PayHOA?

PayHOA is clearly better for self-managed HOA boards. AppFolio requires a 50-unit minimum, costs $880-$1,200/month for a 100-unit community, and is built for professional property management companies. PayHOA starts at $49/month, uses flat pricing, and is purpose-built for volunteer boards managing their own community.

Do AppFolio or PayHOA separate operating and reserve funds?

Neither AppFolio nor PayHOA separates operating and reserve funds as distinct accounting pools by design. AppFolio has more advanced accounting but still requires manual workarounds to approximate fund accounting. PayHOA's accounting module has the same limitation.

Why is AppFolio so much more expensive than PayHOA?

AppFolio is priced for professional property management companies that manage dozens of properties and spread the cost across their client portfolio. A self-managed HOA pays that full cost from community dues. PayHOA is priced for single communities managed by volunteer boards.

Verdict

PayHOA is the clear choice for self-managed HOA boards. AppFolio's pricing, minimum requirements, and professional management focus make it inaccessible and impractical for volunteer boards. For reserve fund compliance alongside core management, BoardStack ($20–$99/mo) adds what PayHOA lacks.

Does AppFolio work for self-managed HOAs?
AppFolio requires a 50-unit minimum and costs $280-$400/month before per-unit fees. A 100-unit HOA would pay $880-$1,200/month. The software is built for professional property managers running multiple properties. Most self-managed HOAs find it impractical both on cost and complexity.
What does PayHOA include that AppFolio does not?
PayHOA is built specifically for HOA governance: board meeting minutes, voting management, homeowner-specific portals, and HOA-specific violation workflows. AppFolio is a general property management tool that handles these things generically or not at all.
Is AppFolio's accounting better than PayHOA?
AppFolio has more advanced accounting features, including deeper reporting and multi-entity management. For a single self-managed HOA, PayHOA's accounting covers day-to-day needs. Neither has fund accounting that separates operating and reserve funds by design.

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  • State-specific compliance
  • No setup fees
  • Flat $20–$99/month

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