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

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Vermont's Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301 et seq.) imposes fiduciary duties on HOA board members and requires associations to manage common elements responsibly. Vermont's ski resort and seasonal condo communities face particularly significant and predictable capital expenditure demands.

Vermont’s Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301 et seq.) does not include detailed reserve study mandates. The fiduciary duties it imposes on volunteer board members are real regardless. COCA requires boards to manage association finances and common elements in the best interest of all members. Courts applying that standard have not accepted the argument that no reserve study was required simply because the statute did not specify one.

Vermont’s HOA market splits into two segments with different capital planning challenges. Burlington’s urban and university-driven condo market contends with aging building stock and sophisticated professional unit owners. Ski resort communities around Stowe, Killington, and Sugarbush manage properties under extreme environmental stress: heavy snow loads, freeze-thaw cycling, and high-use seasonal rental patterns that create capital demands larger and more frequent than national reserve study templates assume.

BoardStack enforces account separation and creates the capital tracking documentation Vermont boards need to demonstrate responsible management. Urban associations operating without a detailed statutory roadmap and seasonal resort associations where reserve underfunding leads directly to emergency special assessments both get the same infrastructure.

Vermont Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301)

Vermont's Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301 et seq.) governs common ownership communities in the state, including condominiums and planned communities. The Act requires boards to manage association finances and common elements in the best interest of all members, which courts have interpreted to include planning for capital expenditures.

Reserve Planning Under COCA Fiduciary Standards

Vermont's COCA does not include the same detailed reserve study mandate as some other states, but the fiduciary duty standard it imposes on board members effectively requires capital planning. Boards that allow common elements to deteriorate through failure to maintain reserves can be held liable for breach of fiduciary duty under COCA's general management provisions.

Ski Resort and Seasonal Community Obligations

Vermont's ski resort communities — particularly around Stowe, Killington, and Sugarbush — have significant condo associations managing high-use, high-wear properties. Ski season traffic, freeze-thaw cycling, and the infrastructure demands of mountain properties create capital expenditure needs that require careful reserve planning.

Governing Document Requirements

Many Vermont associations have reserve fund requirements embedded in their CC&Rs or declarations that are privately enforceable independent of state statutes. Boards should review their governing documents to identify any specific reserve requirements before concluding that no obligation applies.

Vermont has approximately 2,000 community associations statewide, according to the Foundation for Community Association Research.

Source: Foundation for Community Association Research

Major HOA Markets in Vermont

HOA community concentration by metro area

Metro AreaEstimated HOA CommunitiesNotes
Burlington~700+Largest market; university-driven condo demand; Lake Champlain waterfront associations
Stowe / Lamoille County~400+Premier ski resort market; significant condo density with heavy seasonal use
Killington / Rutland~300+Major ski resort corridor; condo associations with high-wear mountain properties
Montpelier / Barre~200+State capital region; government workforce drives steady condo demand

What does Vermont law require for HOA reserve funds?

Vermont's Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301 et seq.) imposes fiduciary duties on board members that require responsible management of association finances and common elements. While Vermont does not mandate specific reserve study formats, the fiduciary standard effectively requires boards to plan for capital expenditures. Many Vermont associations also have private reserve requirements in their governing documents.

Why is reserve planning especially important for Vermont ski resort condo associations?

Ski resort condo associations in Vermont manage properties under extreme environmental stress: heavy snow loads, freeze-thaw cycles, mountain weather exposure, and high seasonal use by rental guests and recreational users. These conditions create capital expenditure demands that are both larger and more frequent than urban or suburban properties. Reserve studies calibrated to these conditions — not national averages — are essential for accurate capital planning.

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Does Vermont require HOA reserve studies by law?
Vermont's Common Ownership Community Act (27 VSA §1301 et seq.) does not include an explicit mandate for formal reserve studies. However, the fiduciary duty standard under COCA requires boards to plan for foreseeable capital expenditures, and many Vermont associations have private reserve requirements in their governing documents.
What reserve planning challenges are unique to Vermont ski resort communities?
Ski resort condo associations face heavy seasonal use, extreme cold, freeze-thaw cycling, and mountain weather exposure that accelerates wear on building systems and common elements. Reserve studies for these communities must account for higher-than-average replacement frequency and cost. Seasonal rental usage in many resort condos also creates additional wear beyond what owner-occupied properties typically experience.
Are Burlington condo associations subject to Vermont's COCA requirements?
Yes. Burlington's condo associations are governed by 27 VSA §1301 et seq. and subject to its fiduciary duty standards. Burlington's urban condo market — driven by the University of Vermont, state government, and a growing professional workforce — has boards managing associations at various stages of their capital expenditure cycle.

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