HOA Compliance by State
State-specific reserve fund requirements, compliance rules, and what self-managed HOA boards need to know to protect themselves from personal liability.
Page 3 of 5
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in North Carolina: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
North Carolina HOA boards must navigate the NC Planned Community Act (G.S. §47F) and NC Condominium Act (G.S. §47C). Condo associations face reserve study requirements. Learn what self-managed boards must do to limit personal liability.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in North Dakota: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
North Dakota condominium associations are governed by the North Dakota Century Code §47-04.1. The state has a smaller HOA market but fiduciary duties still apply. Learn what North Dakota volunteer boards need to know.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Ohio: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Ohio HOA boards must navigate the Planned Community Law (ORC Chapter 5312) and Condominium Act (ORC Chapter 5311). Reserve studies are encouraged and fiduciary duty applies. Learn what self-managed communities must do to protect board members.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Oklahoma: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Oklahoma HOAs are governed by the Oklahoma Homeowners Association Act (60 O.S. §851) and the Unit Ownership Estate Act. Reserve studies are not mandated, but fiduciary duties apply. Learn what Oklahoma volunteer boards need to know.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Pennsylvania: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Pennsylvania HOA boards must navigate the Uniform Planned Community Act (68 Pa. C.S. §5101) and Unit Property Act (68 Pa. C.S. §3101). Learn what self-managed communities must do to protect board members from personal liability.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in South Carolina: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
South Carolina HOA boards are governed by the SC Homeowners Association Act (SC Code §27-30-10 et seq.) and the Horizontal Property Act for condos. Reserve studies are not mandated, but fiduciary duty applies. Learn what self-managed boards must do to limit personal liability.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Rhode Island: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Rhode Island condominium associations are governed by the Condominium Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1) and the HOA Act (§34-36.4). Reserve study requirements apply to condos. Learn what Rhode Island volunteer boards must do to comply.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in South Dakota: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
South Dakota condominium associations are governed by the Condominium Ownership Act (SDCL §43-15A). Learn what reserve obligations apply to South Dakota volunteer boards in Sioux Falls and Rapid City.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Tennessee: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Tennessee HOA boards are governed by the Tennessee Homeowners Association Act (T.C.A. §66-27-201 et seq.). Reserve studies are not mandated, but fiduciary duty applies. Learn what self-managed boards must do to limit personal liability in Nashville, Memphis, and Knoxville.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Texas: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Texas HOA boards face budget transparency rules and records access requirements under Property Code Ch. 204. Learn what self-managed communities must do to protect board members from personal liability.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Vermont: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Vermont common ownership communities are governed by the Vermont Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301). Learn what reserve obligations apply to Vermont volunteer boards, including ski resort and seasonal communities.
HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Wisconsin: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know
Wisconsin condominium associations are governed by WIS. STAT. §703, which requires reserve funds. Planned communities fall under WIS. STAT. §719. Learn what Wisconsin volunteer boards must do to meet their legal obligations.
Know your state's rules before a homeowner does.
Join the BoardStack waitlist and get a plain-English summary of your state's reserve fund compliance requirements.