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HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Georgia: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Georgia's Property Owners' Association Act does not mandate reserve studies, but it imposes fiduciary obligations on board members that courts have interpreted to include prudent financial planning. Volunteer boards that ignore reserve fund planning, commingle operating and reserve funds, or fail to maintain adequate financial records expose individual members to personal liability under Georgia's implied fiduciary duty standard.

Georgia has a large and growing HOA market, driven by Atlanta’s residential expansion. Most Georgia communities are planned subdivisions governed by the Property Owners’ Association Act, and most are self-managed: a volunteer treasurer, board president, and perhaps a secretary handling financial governance without professional management support.

Georgia does not mandate reserve studies, but that does not reduce a board’s exposure — it means the board cannot point to a statutory floor and declare compliance. O.C.G.A. §44-3-232 imposes a fiduciary duty that Georgia courts apply broadly. BoardStack gives self-managed boards the structure to track reserve fund levels, document capital planning decisions, and maintain the financial records that demonstrate prudent governance.

Fund segregation is the most tractable near-term improvement for Georgia HOA boards. Maintaining separate bank accounts for operating and reserve funds costs nothing beyond the initial setup and produces a clean paper trail separating day-to-day expenses from long-term reserves. For boards running out of a single checking account, opening a dedicated reserve account and transferring reserve contributions into it on a consistent schedule is the first concrete step toward defensible governance.

Fiduciary Duty of Board Members (O.C.G.A. §44-3-232)

Georgia's Property Owners' Association Act imposes a duty of care and loyalty on HOA board members. Courts interpreting this standard have held that prudent financial management — including maintaining adequate reserves for major repairs and replacements — is part of the duty of care. A board that knowingly defers reserve funding and later imposes a large special assessment may face member claims for breach of fiduciary duty.

Financial Records Retention and Member Access (O.C.G.A. §44-3-232)

Georgia HOA boards must maintain accurate financial records and make them available to members upon reasonable request. Records include bank statements, invoices, contracts, and meeting minutes. The statute does not specify a retention period, but Georgia corporate law standards (minimum five years) apply to nonprofit associations.

Budget Adoption Requirements

Georgia's POA Act requires that boards adopt an annual budget. While the statute does not prescribe reserve funding formulas, omitting reserve contributions from the budget entirely is inconsistent with prudent governance and can be cited as evidence of mismanagement in member disputes.

Fund Segregation — Fiduciary Best Practice

Georgia statutes do not explicitly require separate reserve accounts, but commingling operating and reserve funds is a recognized indicator of fiduciary breach in Georgia HOA litigation. Maintaining distinct, labeled accounts for operating and reserve funds is the standard of care expected of a prudent board.

Georgia has approximately 14,600 community associations, according to industry research.

Source: Foundation for Community Association Research

Georgia HOA Market Overview by Metro Area

Estimated HOA community counts across major Georgia metropolitan areas based on publicly available data.

Metro AreaEst. HOA CommunitiesPrimary Compliance Risk
Atlanta Metro~11,000+Fiduciary duty, reserve planning
Savannah~900+Records access, fund segregation
Augusta~700+Budget adoption, deferred maintenance
Columbus~500+Financial recordkeeping

What fiduciary duties do Georgia HOA board members have?

Under O.C.G.A. §44-3-232, Georgia HOA board members owe a duty of care and loyalty to the association and its members. This includes adopting a reasonable annual budget, maintaining adequate reserves for foreseeable capital expenditures, keeping accurate financial records, and making those records available to members. The business judgment rule protects good-faith decisions, but not willful neglect.

Does a Georgia HOA have to keep reserve funds in a separate bank account?

Georgia statutes do not explicitly require separate reserve accounts, but maintaining distinct accounts for operating and reserve funds is the standard of care for a prudent board. Commingling funds makes it impossible to demonstrate that reserve contributions are being set aside for their intended purpose, which weakens the board's defense against any member claim of financial mismanagement.

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Does Georgia law require a reserve study for HOAs?
No. Georgia's Property Owners' Association Act (O.C.G.A. §44-3-220 et seq.) does not mandate reserve studies. However, the fiduciary duty imposed on board members under §44-3-232 includes the expectation of prudent financial planning. A reserve study is the primary tool for demonstrating that the board is meeting that standard.
What financial records must a Georgia HOA make available to members?
Georgia's POA Act requires boards to maintain accurate books and make them available to members upon reasonable written request. Standard records include bank statements, general ledgers, invoices, contracts, reserve account statements, and meeting minutes. Boards should retain records for a minimum of five years.
Can Georgia HOA board members be held personally liable for financial decisions?
Yes. Georgia courts apply a fiduciary duty standard to HOA board members. The business judgment rule provides some protection for good-faith decisions, but that protection erodes when a board ignores known financial risks, commingles funds, or fails to maintain adequate records. Volunteer status does not eliminate personal liability exposure.

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