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

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Rhode Island's Condominium Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1) requires condo associations to conduct reserve studies and fund reserves based on the findings. Rhode Island's HOA Act (§34-36.4) imposes fiduciary duties on planned community boards. Non-compliance carries real statutory and liability risk.

Rhode Island’s Condominium Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1) is among the more explicit reserve statutes in New England. Under §34-36.1-3.09, condo associations must conduct reserve studies, maintain a dedicated reserve fund separate from operating accounts, and include adequate reserve contributions in the annual budget. Volunteer boards in Providence, Warwick, and Newport operating without a reserve study are out of compliance with state law.

Newport’s coastal market is Rhode Island’s most distinctive segment for reserve planning. The city’s historic properties, many converted to condominiums, face salt air exposure, storm surge risk, and aging building systems that demand active capital planning. South County’s beach-adjacent seasonal communities face similar conditions with the added complexity of seasonal occupancy patterns. Reserve studies using national average replacement cost assumptions will underfund Rhode Island coastal communities relative to their actual capital needs. Planned communities under the HOA Act (§34-36.4) carry fewer explicit mandates, but the fiduciary duty standard still applies to capital planning decisions.

BoardStack enforces account separation to satisfy §34-36.1-3.09’s fund segregation requirement, tracks capital items against reserve balances, and creates the documentation trail that supports both statutory compliance and fiduciary defense. Providence condo boards and Newport coastal associations get software that treats reserve segregation as a design requirement, not an afterthought.

Reserve Study Requirement (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1-3.09)

Rhode Island's Condominium Act requires condominium associations to conduct reserve studies and include adequate reserve contributions in the annual budget. Under R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1-3.09, the association must maintain a reserve fund for major maintenance, repair, and replacement of common elements. Reserve funds must be held in a dedicated account separate from operating funds.

Reserve Fund Segregation

R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1-3.09 requires reserve funds to be held separately from operating accounts. Commingling reserve and operating funds violates the statute and constitutes a breach of fiduciary duty. Individual board members can be held personally liable for commingling that results in harm to unit owners.

Rhode Island HOA Act Obligations (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.4)

Rhode Island's HOA Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.4 et seq.) governs planned communities and imposes fiduciary duties on board members. While the HOA Act does not contain the same explicit reserve study mandate as the Condominium Act, boards still must manage association finances in the best interest of members — a standard that requires capital planning.

Coastal Community Reserve Risk

Rhode Island's coastal communities — Newport, South County, and Narragansett Bay associations — face accelerated capital expenditure demands from salt air, storm surge exposure, and coastal humidity. Reserve studies for these communities must account for higher-than-average replacement cost and frequency for exterior building components and coastal infrastructure.

Rhode Island has approximately 3,000 community associations statewide, according to the Foundation for Community Association Research.

Source: Foundation for Community Association Research

Major HOA Markets in Rhode Island

HOA community concentration by metro area

Metro AreaEstimated HOA CommunitiesNotes
Providence / Cranston / Pawtucket~1,200+Dominant market; significant urban and suburban condo concentration
Warwick / Kent County~700+Suburban market; mix of condo and planned community associations
Newport County~600+Historic coastal market; high-value condo associations with significant coastal exposure
South County (Washington County)~400+Coastal and seasonal market; beach-adjacent condo associations with elevated capital needs

What does Rhode Island law require for HOA reserve funds?

R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1-3.09 requires Rhode Island condo associations to conduct reserve studies, maintain a reserve fund in a dedicated account separate from operating funds, and include adequate reserve contributions in the annual budget. Planned communities under the HOA Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.4) are subject to fiduciary duty requirements that require capital planning even without the same explicit reserve study mandate.

How can Rhode Island HOA boards protect themselves from liability under §34-36.1-3.09?

The most defensible approach is to commission a reserve study from a qualified reserve specialist, adopt a funding plan based on the study's findings, maintain reserve funds in a dedicated account, and document all compliance decisions. For coastal communities, ensure the reserve study reflects Rhode Island-specific environmental conditions — national average templates systematically underestimate coastal replacement costs.

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Does Rhode Island require reserve studies for condo associations?
Yes. R.I. Gen. Laws §34-36.1-3.09 requires Rhode Island condo associations to conduct reserve studies and maintain a dedicated reserve fund for major maintenance, repair, and replacement of common elements. This is a statutory obligation applicable to condominiums governed by the Rhode Island Condominium Act.
What are the consequences of not maintaining a reserve fund in Rhode Island?
Non-compliance with §34-36.1-3.09 exposes condo associations and individual board members to claims of statutory violation and breach of fiduciary duty. Unit owners can seek remedies including mandatory reserve funding plans and damages for harm caused by reserve underfunding. Courts in Rhode Island take statutory compliance obligations seriously.
How do Rhode Island's coastal communities affect reserve planning requirements?
Newport, South County, and coastal Narragansett Bay communities face environmental conditions — salt air, storm exposure, coastal humidity — that accelerate wear on building systems and common elements. Reserve studies for these communities should reflect local environmental conditions and not rely on national-average replacement cost assumptions.

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