Effortless HOA vs PayHOA for volunteer boards (2026)
TLDR
Effortless HOA charges $3/home/month, which means a 30-home community pays $90/month and a 100-home community pays $300/month. PayHOA uses unit-band pricing: $49-$99/month for up to 100 units. For larger communities, PayHOA is cheaper. For small communities, Effortless HOA may cost less. Neither tool tracks reserve fund compliance.
| Feature | Effortless HOA | PayHOA | BoardStack |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | $3/home/mo | $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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How each tool prices
Effortless HOA uses straight per-unit pricing: $3 per home per month, every month, regardless of features. That model is easy to understand and good for small communities. A 15-home community pays $45/month. A 50-home community pays $150/month. A 200-home community pays $600/month.
PayHOA uses unit bands: up to 50 units is $49/month, 51-100 units is $99/month, 101-300 units is $199/month. Within each band, the price does not change. A 51-unit community and a 100-unit community both pay $99/month.
The crossover point is roughly 34 homes. Below that, Effortless HOA at $3/home costs less than PayHOA’s $49/month base. Above it, PayHOA’s band pricing makes it cheaper for most communities.
What each tool handles
Effortless HOA covers dues collection, violation tracking, homeowner communication, and basic financial reporting. The setup process is simple enough that a volunteer treasurer with no prior software experience can get it running in a few hours. The interface stays out of the way, which matters when board members open the software infrequently.
PayHOA has a wider feature set. Violation management includes photo attachments, notice templates, and a workflow for tracking violations from open to closed. The owner portal lets homeowners pay dues, view their account history, and submit architectural requests. Financial reporting includes income statements, balance sheets, and ledger exports. For a community that runs more formal board operations, PayHOA’s depth is useful.
Where both fall short
Neither tool separates operating funds from reserve funds at the accounting level. Both let you record reserve fund transactions, but they sit in the same general ledger as operating expenses. That commingling is exactly the problem that creates personal liability risk for board members in states where reserve fund segregation is legally required.
Reserve fund compliance tracking (tracking your current reserve balance against reserve study targets, flagging underfunding, generating the reserve disclosure reports many states mandate) is not in either product.
Where BoardStack fits
BoardStack ($20–$99/mo flat by community size) includes fund accounting with separate operating and reserve ledgers, reserve compliance tracking tied to reserve study targets, and the financial reports boards need for annual meetings and state disclosures.
The flat pricing works like PayHOA’s band model, so costs do not scale linearly as your community grows. For communities where reserve compliance is a legal requirement, BoardStack covers the gap that Effortless HOA and PayHOA both leave open.
| Feature | Effortless HOA | PayHOA |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing model | Per unit ($3/home/mo) | Flat tiers ($49-$199/mo) |
| 30-home monthly cost | $90/mo | $49/mo |
| 100-home monthly cost | $300/mo | $99/mo |
| Reserve fund accounting | No | No |
| Operating/reserve fund separation | No | No |
| Violation tracking | Basic | Yes (with photo evidence) |
| Owner portal | Basic | Yes |
| Setup complexity | Low | Moderate |
PROS & CONS
Effortless HOA
Pros
- Very simple setup — usable without prior software experience
- Per-unit pricing is cost-effective for very small communities under 30 homes
- Minimal interface that stays out of the way for infrequent users
Cons
- Gets expensive fast: $300/month for 100 homes, $600/month for 200 homes
- No reserve fund compliance tracking
- Limited violation management and owner portal features
PROS & CONS
PayHOA
Pros
- Flat band pricing caps costs regardless of unit count within each tier
- Stronger violation management with photo documentation
- More complete owner portal with payment history and document access
Cons
- No reserve fund compliance tracking
- More setup required than Effortless HOA
- Minimum $49/month even for the smallest communities
At what community size does PayHOA become cheaper than Effortless HOA?
Effortless HOA at $3/home/month reaches $49 at roughly 16 homes and $99 at 33 homes. PayHOA's $49/month base tier covers up to 50 units. PayHOA becomes cheaper at around 17 homes when comparing to the $49 base tier. For communities between 34 and 100 homes, PayHOA at $99/month is consistently cheaper than Effortless HOA's per-unit rate.
Which is better for self-managed HOA boards, Effortless HOA or PayHOA?
For communities under 30 homes, Effortless HOA may cost less and is simpler to set up. For communities of 34 homes or more, PayHOA is typically cheaper and offers stronger violation management and owner portal features. Neither tool tracks reserve fund compliance.
Do Effortless HOA or PayHOA handle reserve fund accounting?
No. Neither Effortless HOA nor PayHOA separates operating and reserve funds as distinct accounting pools or tracks reserve funding levels against reserve study targets. Reserve compliance is a gap in both products.
Verdict
Effortless HOA is the better value for communities under 30 homes. PayHOA wins for communities of 50+ homes on price. For reserve compliance, you need something else regardless.
At what community size does PayHOA become cheaper than Effortless HOA?
Does Effortless HOA include reserve fund tracking?
What does PayHOA do better than Effortless HOA?
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