CINC Systems vs TownSq for HOA boards (2026)
TLDR
CINC Systems is built for professional HOA management companies running portfolios of associations. Pricing starts at $149-$399/month and the platform assumes dedicated staff running software daily. TownSq takes a community-first approach with a free entry tier and per-unit pricing, but its financial management is shallow. Self-managed volunteer boards are underserved by both: CINC is too enterprise, TownSq lacks the financial depth boards with reserve fund obligations need.
| Feature | CINC Systems | TownSq | BoardStack |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | $149-$399/mo | Free-$2/unit/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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Two platforms targeting different buyers
CINC is built for professional HOA management companies running large association portfolios. TownSq is built for the community itself: homeowners and volunteer boards. Neither was designed with the volunteer self-managed board as the primary user.
That design intent explains why both fall short for self-managed HOAs with specific financial compliance needs.
CINC Systems: enterprise for a reason
CINC Systems is a full-service HOA management platform used by professional management companies. It covers accounting, homeowner portals, violation management, and multi-portfolio reporting. The interface assumes daily use by professional staff familiar with property management workflows.
A management company running 50 associations gets value from CINC’s depth. A volunteer treasurer opening the software once a month to run financial reports for a 100-unit community finds the platform is overkill. The onboarding process, learning curve, and pricing structure are calibrated for professional management.
At $149-$399/month, CINC’s pricing is reasonable when spread across client fees for a portfolio. As the full software budget for one self-managed HOA, it is hard to justify.
TownSq: community-first, financial depth second
TownSq starts with community engagement: homeowner communication, announcements, a resident directory, and a neighbor-facing experience. Financial management, violations, and board tools layer on top.
Homeowners actually use TownSq’s portal, which drives real value out of the communication and notification features. That is something the HOA software industry consistently struggles to achieve.
The tradeoff is financial depth. TownSq’s accounting tools are basic compared to platforms built around accounting as a core capability. Recording a reserve fund deposit and tracking reserve adequacy against a reserve study are different capabilities. TownSq handles the former without the latter.
The compliance gap both share
Neither CINC nor TownSq tracks reserve fund compliance fully. CINC has more robust accounting overall, but the platform does not measure reserve adequacy against reserve study targets or flag underfunding risk as a core workflow. TownSq’s financial tools do not reach reserve tracking beyond basic transaction recording.
A ledger balance is not a reserve adequacy report. State law and annual meeting requirements demand documentation that connects the current reserve balance to the reserve study’s projected needs. Neither platform generates that documentation without manual calculation.
Where volunteer self-managed boards fall
Volunteer self-managed HOA boards sit between CINC and TownSq. They need TownSq’s accessibility and community-first design for homeowner adoption. They need CINC-level financial rigor for fiduciary compliance. Neither platform delivers both.
CINC is designed for the professional who manages a community on behalf of the board. TownSq is designed for the community experience and leaves financial compliance to manual processes.
BoardStack is designed for the volunteer board that needs strong financial compliance, including reserve fund tracking, without the cost and complexity of professional management software.
| Feature | CINC Systems | TownSq |
|---|---|---|
| Target user | Professional management companies | Self-managed HOAs and condos |
| Pricing model | Flat monthly ($149-$399/mo) | Free to $2/unit/mo |
| Reserve fund compliance | No | No |
| Financial management depth | High (professional accounting) | Low (basic tracking) |
| Community engagement tools | Moderate | Strong (community-first design) |
| Violation tracking | Yes | Yes |
| Online dues collection | Yes | Yes |
| Setup complexity | High — professional onboarding | Low — self-serve |
| Best for | Management companies | Community-focused boards |
PROS & CONS
CINC Systems
Pros
- Professional-grade accounting and financial management
- Full association management workflow designed for management company operations
- Dedicated onboarding and support for complex implementations
Cons
- Priced and designed for professional management companies, not volunteer boards
- High learning curve for monthly volunteer use
- No reserve fund compliance tracking
- Cost is difficult to justify for a single self-managed community
PROS & CONS
TownSq
Pros
- Free entry tier available for basic community features
- Community-first design with strong homeowner engagement tools
- Per-unit pricing scales with community size
- Lower setup complexity and self-serve onboarding
Cons
- Financial management is too shallow for boards with reserve fund obligations
- No reserve fund compliance tracking
- Per-unit pricing can scale up for larger communities
- Free tier is limited — most boards need a paid plan
Is CINC Systems or TownSq better for a volunteer HOA board?
TownSq is better suited to volunteer self-managed HOA boards than CINC Systems. TownSq's community-first design and lower pricing fit the volunteer board context. CINC Systems is built for professional management companies running portfolios of associations — the cost, complexity, and assumed use case do not match a volunteer board managing one community. That said, TownSq's financial management is shallow, which matters for boards with reserve fund tracking requirements.
Why is CINC Systems so expensive compared to other HOA software?
CINC Systems is priced for professional HOA management companies that manage dozens of communities for paying clients. The $149-$399/month cost is shared across a management company's client portfolio, not paid by one self-managed HOA. The pricing reflects enterprise-grade onboarding, training, and support that management companies require. For a single self-managed association, that cost structure is a poor fit.
What does TownSq's free plan include?
TownSq's free plan includes basic community features: homeowner communication, announcements, and a resident directory. Financial management, violation tracking, and document management require a paid plan. Most HOA boards with active operational needs end up on a paid tier.
Verdict
Neither CINC Systems nor TownSq is ideal for volunteer self-managed HOA boards. CINC is enterprise software priced and designed for professional management companies — the learning curve and cost do not fit volunteer board use. TownSq is more accessible but its financial management is too shallow for boards with reserve fund obligations. Self-managed boards that need both community engagement tools and serious financial compliance tracking are not well served by either platform.
Is CINC Systems good for self-managed HOAs?
Is TownSq free?
Do CINC or TownSq handle reserve fund compliance?
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Related Comparisons
Best CINC Systems Alternative for Self-Managed HOAs
CINC Systems is built for professional HOA management companies and is not available to self-managed boards. BoardStack gives self-managed communities professional-grade tools at $20–$99/mo.
Best TownSq Alternative for Self-Managed HOAs
TownSq's free tier is communication-only. Self-managed boards that need reserve fund tracking and financial compliance should look beyond TownSq's weak financial tools.
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