Asphalt shingle, metal, tile, or flat membrane roofs. Siding (wood, fiber cement, stucco, vinyl). Exterior paint. Soffits and fascia. Gutters and downspouts. Decks and balconies. Railings. Window and door frames in common areas.
HOAs & Condos in Stuart, FL
385 registered communities in Stuart across Martin County. Mix: 168 condominium, 99 homeowners association, 85 property owners association, 28 unclassified entity, 5 townhome association. Median monthly HOA/condo fee in the county is $410.
Resale Certificate Compliance
18 disclosures required
FL
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Parking space designation for the parcel Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(d)
Parking or garage space number, as reflected in the books and records of the association: Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(d) · verified May 2026
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Assessment paid-through date and next assessment due date Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)2-3
The regular periodic assessment is paid through (insert date paid through). The next installment of the regular periodic assessment is due (insert due date) in the amount of $. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)2-3 · verified May 2026
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All assessments, fees, and other charges levied against the parcel, itemized Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)4
An itemized list of all assessments, special assessments, and other moneys owed on the date of issuance to the association by the parcel owner for a specific parcel is provided. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)4 · verified May 2026
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Approved special assessments that are scheduled to be levied Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)5
An itemized list of any additional assessments, special assessments, and other moneys that are scheduled to become due for each day after the date of issuance for the effective period of the estoppel certificate is provided. In calculating the amounts that are scheduled to become due, the association may assume that any delinquent amounts will remain delinquent during the effective period of the estoppel certificate. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)5 · verified May 2026
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Assessments to be levied against the parcel in the next 12 months Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)5
An itemized list of any additional assessments, special assessments, and other moneys that are scheduled to become due for each day after the date of issuance for the effective period of the estoppel certificate is provided. In calculating the amounts that are scheduled to become due, the association may assume that any delinquent amounts will remain delinquent during the effective period of the estoppel certificate. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)5 · verified May 2026
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Capital contribution or transfer fees due upon sale or transfer Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)6
Is there a capital contribution fee, resale fee, transfer fee, or other fee due? (Yes) (No). If yes, specify the type and amount of the fee. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)6 · verified May 2026
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Other fees payable by the parcel owner to the association Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)6
Is there a capital contribution fee, resale fee, transfer fee, or other fee due? (Yes) (No). If yes, specify the type and amount of the fee. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)6 · verified May 2026
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Outstanding violations of record against the parcel Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)7
Is there any open violation of rule or regulation noticed to the parcel owner in the association official records? (Yes) (No). Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)7 · verified May 2026
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Whether board approval is required for transfer of the parcel Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)8
Do the rules and regulations of the association applicable to the parcel require approval by the board of directors of the association for the transfer of the parcel? (Yes) (No). If yes, has the board approved the transfer of the parcel? (Yes) (No). Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)8 · verified May 2026
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Right of first refusal and whether it has been exercised Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)9
Is there a right of first refusal provided to the members or the association? (Yes) (No). If yes, have the members or the association exercised that right of first refusal? (Yes) (No). Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)9 · verified May 2026
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Other associations or entities serving the property Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)10
Provide a list of, and contact information for, all other associations of which the parcel is a member. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)10 · verified May 2026
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Insurance coverage description and contact information for insurance agent Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)11
Provide contact information for all insurance maintained by the association. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(1)(h)11 · verified May 2026
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Certificate validity period and preparation date Fla. Stat. §720.30851(2)
An estoppel certificate that is hand delivered or sent by electronic means has a 30-day effective period. An estoppel certificate that is sent by regular mail has a 35-day effective period. If additional information or a mistake related to the estoppel certificate becomes known to the association within the effective period, an amended estoppel certificate may be delivered and becomes effective if a sale or refinancing of the parcel has not been completed during the effective period. A fee may not be charged for an amended estoppel certificate. An amended estoppel certificate must be delivered on the date of issuance, and a new 30-day or 35-day effective period begins on such date. Fla. Stat. §720.30851(2) · verified May 2026
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Declaration, articles, bylaws, rules, and all amendments Fla. Stat. §720.303(4)(a)2-5
A copy of the bylaws of the association and of each amendment to the bylaws. A copy of the articles of incorporation of the association and of each amendment thereto. A copy of the declaration of covenants and a copy of each amendment thereto. A copy of the current rules of the homeowners' association. Fla. Stat. §720.303(4)(a)2-5 · verified May 2026
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Current year operating budget Fla. Stat. §720.303(6)(a)
The association shall prepare an annual budget that sets out the annual operating expenses. The budget must reflect the estimated revenues and expenses for that year and the estimated surplus or deficit as of the end of the current year. The budget must set out separately all fees or charges paid for by the association for recreational amenities, whether owned by the association, the developer, or another person. The association shall provide each member with a copy of the annual budget or a written notice that a copy of the budget is available upon request at no charge to the member. Fla. Stat. §720.303(6)(a) · verified May 2026
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Amount of reserves and designation for specified projects Fla. Stat. §720.303(6)(b)
In addition to annual operating expenses, the budget may include reserve accounts for capital expenditures and deferred maintenance for which the association is responsible. If reserve accounts are not established pursuant to paragraph (d), funding of such reserves is limited to the extent that the governing documents limit increases in assessments, including reserves. If the budget of the association includes reserve accounts established pursuant to paragraph (d), such reserves shall be determined, maintained, and waived in the manner provided in this subsection. Fla. Stat. §720.303(6)(b) · verified May 2026
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Most recent financial report or balance sheet Fla. Stat. §720.303(7)
Within 90 days after the end of the fiscal year, or annually on the date provided in the bylaws, the association shall prepare and complete, or contract with a third party for the preparation and completion of, a financial report for the preceding fiscal year. Within 21 days after the final financial report is completed by the association or received from the third party, but not later than 120 days after the end of the fiscal year or other date as provided in the bylaws, the association shall, within the time limits set forth in subsection (5), provide each member with a copy of the annual financial report or a written notice that a copy of the financial report is available upon request at no charge to the member. Fla. Stat. §720.303(7) · verified May 2026
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Restrictions on use, lease, or rental of the parcel Fla. Stat. §720.401(1)(a)2
THERE HAVE BEEN OR WILL BE RECORDED RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS GOVERNING THE USE AND OCCUPANCY OF PROPERTIES IN THIS COMMUNITY. Fla. Stat. §720.401(1)(a)2 · verified May 2026
View all Florida statutes and legal requirements →
Reserve study standards in Florida
Statutory requirements, board preparation checklist, the components a professional study covers, and the useful-life ranges that drive thirty-year funding plans. Generic reference. Not a substitute for a study calibrated to a specific association.
- Cadence
- 10 years maximum
- Authority
- Fla. Stat. §718.112(2)(g)
- Scope
- Component register, condition assessment, funding analysis
Florida condominiums of three stories or more must complete a Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) every ten years (Fla. Stat. §718.112(2)(g)).
Most state regimes also require:
- Annual disclosure of reserve funding status to owners.
- Segregation of reserve funds from operating cash.
- Board approval of the funding plan tied to the most recent study.
A reserve study has three parts:
- Component register — every long-lived asset the association is responsible for maintaining.
- Condition assessment — current age, remaining useful life, observable wear.
- Funding analysis — how much the association must contribute each year so cash is available when components reach end-of-life.
CommunityPay maintains a Reserve Funding Status Report (RSR) generator tied to the live ledger. It is a status report, not a substitute for a professional study with on-site inspection.
What a board should have organized before commissioning a reserve study, and what a study delivers back. Use this list to evaluate whether the association is ready, regardless of state.
- Component register Every asset the association is responsible for maintaining — roofs, asphalt, mechanical systems, plumbing risers, elevators, amenities. Freeze a current version before the study.
- Condition assessments Last inspection reports, photographs, observed wear, recent repairs. The analyst calibrates useful-life estimates against this evidence.
- Useful-life and replacement-cost estimates Per component, calibrated to local climate, construction, and use intensity. A study produces these; the board verifies them.
- Thirty-year capital plan When each component reaches end-of-life and what replacement will cost in nominal dollars at that year.
- Funding plan Percent-funded, threshold, or baseline approach with an explicit annual contribution. The board approves; the study models outcomes.
- Current reserve fund balance Separated from operating cash. Ideally in interest-bearing accounts with FDIC coverage on the full balance.
- Annual budget tied to the funding plan Reserve contribution as an explicit budget line, traceable to the study and the funding policy.
- Most recent reserve study Full study, update, or interim review. Author credentials and date of the most recent on-site inspection.
- Insurance schedule Replacement-cost coverage on insured components. Deductibles that may draw against reserves in a loss.
- Board minutes referencing reserve decisions Special assessments, deferred maintenance, funding-policy changes, scope deviations from the study.
Categories most reserve studies cover. The specific components depend on the association. High-rise condos track far more than single-family HOAs. Gated communities track infrastructure that condos never see.
HVAC chillers and cooling towers. Boilers and water heaters. Ventilation. Pumps. Fire suppression and sprinkler systems. Emergency generators. Elevators — cabs, controllers, jacks, and modernizations.
Parking lots: seal coat, overlay, full reconstruction. Concrete sidewalks and curbs. Site lighting. Storm drainage. Retaining walls. Fencing. Entry gates and signage.
Main water lines and risers. Sanitary and storm sewer lines. Backflow preventers. Common-area electrical panels and switchgear. Transformer pads. Distribution.
Pools, spas, and pool equipment. Clubhouse interiors. Fitness rooms. Playgrounds. Tennis and pickleball courts. Mailbox kiosks. Trash enclosures and dumpster pads.
Fire alarm panels. Emergency lighting. Smoke detectors in common areas. Fire-rated doors. Structural fireproofing. Sprinkler heads and inspection-required components.
A mid-size HOA typically tracks thirty to eighty components. A high-rise condo tracks two hundred or more. The categories above are illustrative. A professional reserve study identifies the components a specific association is responsible for.
Typical useful-life ranges for components common in reserve studies. Industry averages, not specific to any state, climate, or association. A professional study calibrates these to local conditions, construction quality, maintenance practice, and use intensity.
| Component | Typical useful life |
|---|---|
| Asphalt shingle roof | 20–25 years |
| Metal roof | 40–50 years |
| Tile or slate roof | 50+ years |
| Flat membrane roof (TPO/EPDM) | 15–25 years |
| Wood siding | 20–30 years |
| Fiber cement siding | 30–50 years |
| Stucco | 50+ years |
| Exterior paint cycle | 7–10 years |
| Gutters and downspouts | 20–30 years |
| Wood deck, pressure-treated | 15–20 years |
| Composite deck | 25–30 years |
| Asphalt parking — seal coat | 3–5 years |
| Asphalt parking — overlay | 12–15 years |
| Asphalt parking — reconstruction | 25–30 years |
| Concrete sidewalks and curbs | 30–50 years |
| Site lighting (poles, fixtures) | 20–30 years |
| Wood fencing | 15–25 years |
| Pool plaster | 10–15 years |
| Pool pump and filter | 7–10 years |
| HVAC rooftop unit | 15–20 years |
| Boiler | 25–30 years |
| Commercial water heater | 10–15 years |
| Fire alarm panel | 20–25 years |
| Elevator cab finishes | 15–20 years |
| Elevator modernization | 25–30 years |
| Carpet, clubhouse | 7–10 years |
| Playground equipment | 10–15 years |
Ranges synthesized from common professional reserve-study references and U.S. building-component literature. Verify against a study performed by a credentialed reserve specialist (RS, PRA, or equivalent) before relying on any figure for funding decisions.
- Reserve Health Check → Free. Inputs reserve balance, annual contribution, building age, and components; returns a grade with the math shown. No signup required to view results.
Meeting requirements in Florida
Statutory floors for owner and board meetings — notice periods, delivery rules, quorum, voting, written consent, and record retention. Generic reference. Specific bylaws or declarations may impose tighter requirements; statutes set the minimum.
- Annual / owner meeting
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14
days advance notice
Fla. Stat. §720.306(2) - Board meeting
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48
hours advance notice
Fla. Stat. §718.112(2)(c)
Most state regimes also require:
- Open meetings — board meetings open to all members in good standing; closed executive sessions only for narrow purposes (litigation, personnel, contracts).
- Agenda discipline — the board cannot vote on substantive matters not included in the noticed agenda except in narrow emergency circumstances.
- Annual meeting — at least one owner meeting per year, with notice mailed to the address on record for each owner.
- Quorum thresholds — defined in the declaration or bylaws; statutory default applies when governing documents are silent.
CommunityPay maintains a Board Meeting Packet generator that produces a state-aware agenda, draft minutes template, and compliance checklist for the board pack.
How meeting notice must be delivered, what it must contain, and what defects invalidate the notice. Statutes vary in mechanics; the principles are consistent.
- Delivery method First-class mail or hand-delivery to the address on file with the association is the universal default. Most states permit electronic delivery only with the owner's written consent. A posted notice on a community bulletin board is not, by itself, sufficient.
- Address on file The association is entitled to rely on the address each owner has provided. The owner bears the burden of keeping it current. The board must maintain a registered address list.
- Required content Date, time, location (or remote-access link), and an agenda. Material to be voted on — budget, special assessments, rule changes — must be identified specifically. "Other business" is not a substitute for an item.
- Notice period start The notice period typically runs from the date of mailing or hand-delivery, not the date of receipt. Some states count both the notice date and the meeting date; others exclude one or both. Confirm the rule.
- Remote participation When the association offers remote attendance, the notice must include the access information and any limitations (e.g., audio-only, no chat). Recording rules vary by state.
- Defective notice consequences Material defects invalidate actions taken at the meeting. Minor defects (typo in location, slightly late mailing) may be cured by attendance and waiver. Document the cure in the minutes.
- Emergency notice Statutes typically permit shortened notice for genuine emergencies (imminent physical harm, immediate financial loss). The board must document the emergency basis in the minutes.
Full notice requirements appear in Fla. Stat. §720.303 and the specific subsections cited in the Requirements tab.
Quorum sets the floor for a valid meeting. Voting mechanics — proxies, ballots, written consent — determine how votes are counted once the quorum is established.
Statute sets the default at 30% of allocated interests unless the governing documents specify a different threshold.
Most states permit proxies for owner meetings. The proxy must be written, dated, and signed; many states require revocation rights and an explicit scope (general or limited). Proxies do not extend to board meetings — directors must vote in person or by permitted remote means.
Action without a meeting requires unanimous written consent in most jurisdictions, though some states permit a lower threshold for narrow categories (uncontested matters, ratification). Document the consent in the corporate records, indexed to the action taken.
Secret-ballot procedures, double-envelope requirements, and inspector-of-elections rules apply in states with comprehensive election statutes. Director elections, recall votes, and assessment increases above a statutory threshold typically require secret-ballot procedure.
Available only when explicitly authorized by the declaration or bylaws. Otherwise straight voting applies — each membership casts one vote per open seat per candidate, with no concentration permitted.
Voting rights may be suspended for delinquent accounts in some jurisdictions. Suspension typically requires due-process notice and an opportunity to cure. Statutes vary; the bylaws must align.
Voting and quorum procedures are codified in Fla. Stat. §720.303 and applicable subsections. Specific procedures may be modified in the declaration and bylaws within statutory limits.
Minutes are the corporate record of the meeting. Statutes in every state require associations to maintain meeting minutes and make them available to owners on request. Retention periods and access rules vary.
- What minutes must contain Date, time, location. Directors and officers present. Quorum determination. Motions made, seconded, and the vote count. Substantive board actions and adopted resolutions. Executive-session minutes kept separately; the open-session minutes record only that a closed session occurred.
- Retention period Florida requires retention for at least 7 years. Reserve studies, declarations, amendments, and assessments — permanent.
- Owner inspection rights Florida requires the association to respond within 10 business days of a written request.
- Approval process Draft minutes are circulated to the board, corrected, and approved at the next regular meeting. Approved minutes become the official record. Corrections after approval require a noted amendment, not silent edits.
- Permanent records Declaration, bylaws, articles of incorporation, rule books, amendments, and the minute book are permanent records. The association cannot dispose of them on any retention schedule.
- Resale disclosure Recent board and owner meeting minutes are typically required attachments to a resale certificate. The standard window is the last 12 months; some statutes extend to 24 months for amendments.
- Executive session Closed-session minutes record matters discussed but typically remain confidential from the general membership. Specific votes taken in closed session may need to be reported in the open-session minutes.
Records retention and inspection rights are codified in Fla. Stat. §720.303 and related subsections. A records-request response that misses the statutory deadline may expose the association to a per-day penalty.
- Board Meeting Packet Generator → Free. State-aware agenda, minutes template, and compliance checklist exported to a PDF for the board pack. No signup required.
Download the Florida HOA & Condo Compliance Checklist
One PDF — every active Florida statute we track, statutory fee caps and time limits, recent legal changes from the last 12 months, and the resale-certificate disclosure profile. Built from CommunityPay's living legal corpus, the same data that drives our resale certificates, reserve reports, and CARI scoring.
- Statutory fee caps and time limits (resale, late fees, lien priority)
- Recent law changes with effective dates
- Resale & estoppel disclosure profile, item by item
Request a Florida resale certificate
Florida law requires 18 statutory disclosures on every resale. Buyers, agents, and title officers can request a certificate here — we contact the board to deliver it.
Request Florida resale certificate