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10 Questions to Ask Your
Condo Board
Before you buy, contact the condo board with the following
questions. In the process, you'll learn how responsive—and
organized—its members are.
1. What percentage of units is owner-occupied? What percentage is
tenant-occupied? Generally, the higher the percentage of
owner-occupied units, the more marketable the units will be at
resale.
2. What covenants, bylaws, and restrictions govern the property?
What grandfather clauses are in place? You may find, for instance,
that those who buy a property after a certain date can't rent out
their units, but buyers who bought earlier can. Ask for a copy of
the bylaws to determine if you can live within them. And have an
attorney review property docs, including the master deed, for you.
3. How much does the association keep in reserve? How is that money
being invested?
4. Are association assessments keeping pace with the annual rate of
inflation? Smart boards raise assessments a certain percentage each
year to build reserves to fund future repairs.
To determine if the assessment is
reasonable, compare the rate to others in the area.
5. What does and doesn't the assessment cover—common area
maintenance, recreational facilities, trash collection, snow
removal?
6. What special assessments have been mandated in the past five
years? How much was each owner responsible for? Some special
assessments are unavoidable. But repeated, expensive assessments
could be a red flag about the condition of the building or the
board's fiscal policy.
7. How much turnover occurs in the building?
8. Is the project in litigation? If the builders or homeowners are
involved in a lawsuit, reserves can be depleted quickly.
9. Is the developer reputable? Find out what other projects the
developer has built and visit one if you can. Ask residents about
their perceptions. Request an engineer's report for developments
that have been reconverted from other uses to determine what shape
the building is in. If the roof, windows, and bricks aren't in good
repair, they become your problem once you buy.
10. Are multiple
associations involved in the property? In very large developments,
umbrella associations, as well as the smaller association into which
you're buying, may require separate assessments.
Reprinted from
REALTOR® Magazine (http://www.realtor.org/realtormag)
with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.
Copyright 2005. All rights reserved."
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