Insurers are dropping HOAs, threatening the condo market

Insurance is getting harder to seek out and dearer in much of the country. Just ask homeowners’ associations.

Mirroring trends within the single-family home market, insurers are boosting premiums or exiting the business of covering HOAs’ common property entirely, citing rising losses from extreme weather and aging buildings. The steep premium hikes normally find yourself passed on to individual owners in the shape of upper monthly dues.

For a lot of insurers, HOA coverage is a comparatively area of interest product, however the 74 million Americans who live in those communities depend on what’s referred to as master policies to insure common property like sidewalks, playgrounds, and within the case of multifamily buildings, roofs and certain interior and exterior features.

These higher insurance costs are one more expense that’s making homeownership a challenge for a growing swath of Americans. Also they are increasingly unavoidable: In lots of parts of the country, HOA communities make up a growing proportion of local housing stock.

“All the catastrophes and the disasters have contributed to rising premiums,” said Dawn Bauman, executive director for the Foundation for Community Association Research. “It’s not only condominium associations or community associations — it’s every bit of the insurance market.”

Read more: Must you buy a house with a homeowners’ association?

The 2021 Surfside, Fla., condo collapse was a turning point that made coverage harder to maintain, particularly for condo associations, Bauman said. Insurance issues have also affected HOAs made up of single-family homes, but they’re most profound in communities of apartments, rowhouses and townhomes because those developments have more communal features.

1000’s of miles from Florida, in suburban Minneapolis, insurance broker Eric Skarnes is having increasing trouble finding options for his clients in Minnesota and Colorado. In each states, insurers fear hail damage, which may pummel roofs.

“The times of getting two, three, or 4 options are long gone,” said Skarnes, whose company, Insurance Warehouse, insures around 500 HOAs. “Most associations are only lucky to get a renewal.”

Mark Foster sits on the board for an 84-unit complex in Lakeville, Minn. Since 2021, premiums on his HOA’s master insurance policy have quadrupled to $236,000. Despite being spared from several severe hailstorms which have hit the region in recent times, his association was dropped by their insurer when the overall value of their insured property surpassed $60 million.

“We got booted to the secondary market,” he said. “It’s terribly expensive.”

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