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

Last updated: March 20, 2026

TLDR

Maryland HOA boards must address reserves in annual budgets, and condo boards face a mandatory annual reserve study requirement under §11-109.1.

Maryland’s split between condominium and planned community requirements creates confusion for boards that manage mixed-use developments or that are unsure which statute controls their community. The simplest test is the legal form of ownership: if the property is organized as a condominium regime under Maryland law, the Condo Act applies and the annual reserve study is mandatory. If it is a planned community with lots and common area, the HOA Act applies and the governing documents fill in the reserve study requirement.

The Baltimore metro area, Montgomery County, and the DC suburbs have a high concentration of older condominium buildings that face significant capital needs in the coming years. For boards of these communities, the annual reserve study is not just a compliance checkbox; it is the tool that reveals whether current contributions will cover those capital needs or produce a large assessment. Getting the study right is how a board demonstrates it is managing the community’s financial future.

HOA Annual Budget Must Address Reserves

Maryland's Homeowners Association Act (§11B) requires HOA boards to adopt an annual budget that addresses the association's financial obligations, including reserves for the repair and replacement of major common area components. The budget must be distributed to members, and the reserve treatment must be visible in the document.

Condo Associations Must Conduct Annual Reserve Studies

Maryland Condominium Act §11-109.1 requires condominium councils of unit owners to conduct an annual reserve study. The study must address all major common elements and calculate the funding needed to maintain them. This is one of the most frequent annual reserve study requirements in the country.

HOA Reserve Requirements Depend on Governing Documents

For planned community HOAs (as opposed to condominiums), the specific reserve study requirement depends heavily on the governing documents. Many Maryland HOA declarations were written with reserve study provisions that exceed what §11B requires. Boards should treat the governing documents as the primary source of reserve obligations.

Fiduciary Duty Applies to Both HOAs and Condos

Maryland board members owe a fiduciary duty to their associations under both statutes and common law. A board that knowingly allows reserves to deplete without a plan, or that approves expenditures of reserve funds for operating purposes, can face breach-of-duty claims. The business judgment rule provides protection for documented, good-faith decisions.

Annual Study Requirement Creates a Natural Documentation Cycle

For condominium associations, the annual reserve study requirement in §11-109.1 creates a built-in documentation cycle. A board that commissions the study, reviews it at the annual meeting, adopts the recommended funding contributions, and records all of this in the minutes has a clean paper trail that addresses the most common sources of member complaints about reserve management.

Maryland has approximately 6,500 HOA communities, with high concentration in the Baltimore metro and the DC suburbs of Montgomery and Prince George's counties.

Source: Foundation for Community Association Research

Major HOA Markets in Maryland

HOA community concentration by metro area in Maryland

Metro AreaEstimated HOA CommunitiesNotes
Montgomery County / DC Suburbs~1,800+Highest concentration; mix of large planned communities and condominiums
Baltimore City / Baltimore County~1,500+Dense condo stock and suburban HOAs
Prince George's County~1,200+Large planned community market near DC
Anne Arundel County~800+Mix of waterfront communities and suburban HOAs
Howard County~600+Active planned community market in Columbia and surrounding areas

What are the HOA reserve fund requirements in Maryland?

Maryland's HOA Act (§11B) requires annual budgets to address reserves for the repair and replacement of major common area components. Maryland Condominium Act §11-109.1 requires condominium councils to conduct an annual reserve study — one of the most frequent annual study requirements in the country. For planned community HOAs, governing documents often impose additional reserve study obligations.

Do HOA boards in Maryland need reserve studies?

Condominium associations must conduct a reserve study annually under §11-109.1. For planned community HOAs, the requirement depends on the governing documents; many Maryland HOA declarations require periodic reserve studies. Boards should treat the governing documents as the primary source of reserve study obligations.

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What does the Maryland Condo Act annual reserve study require specifically?
§11-109.1 requires the study to identify major common elements, estimate their remaining useful life, estimate replacement costs, and calculate the reserve fund contribution needed to maintain adequate funding. The study must be prepared or reviewed by a qualified professional, though the statute does not specify a particular credential.
Can a Maryland HOA skip the reserve study if it is small?
The Condominium Act does not contain a size exemption for the annual study requirement. Small condo associations are subject to the same §11-109.1 obligation as large ones. For planned community HOAs, the governing documents control, and many do not contain size exemptions either.
Are Maryland HOA reserves required to be in a separate account?
Neither §11B nor §11-109.1 explicitly mandates a separate bank account, but accurate accounting that distinguishes reserve funds from operating funds is required. A separate account is the practical solution most Maryland associations use, and it is the standard practice recommended by HOA attorneys in the state.

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