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    Home - Finance & Investment - The Hidden Cost That’s Ruining Vacation Home Dreams
    Finance & Investment

    The Hidden Cost That’s Ruining Vacation Home Dreams

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    The Hidden Cost That’s Ruining Vacation Home Dreams
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    Over the past three decades, retirees and near-retirees have flocked to managed communities — condominiums, townhomes, and 55+ developments — seeking predictable costs and “lock-and-leave” convenience. Yet today, a “triple whammy” of rising homeowners’ association (HOA) assessments, soaring property taxes, and spiking insurance premiums is forcing prospective buyers — and their financial advisors — to rethink whether a second home still fits within their risk tolerance and retirement income plans.

    The triple whammy: HOA fees, taxes and insurance

    In many resort-style communities, annual HOA fee hikes of 10% or more are now commonplace. At the same time, hurricane and wildfire insurance premiums — once an afterthought for lock-and-leave investors — have become alarmingly volatile. According to Insurify, the average homeowner will pay an extra $261 in insurance premiums by year’s end; Florida remains the most expensive state, with average annual premiums projected to reach $15,460 in 2025.

    Property taxes, too, continue to apply upward pressure on ownership costs. Although Florida legislators have debated property-tax reform, including outright elimination, relief remains elusive. As a result, combined carrying costs increasingly outweigh vacation-home cash flows, especially when investors consider opportunity costs in today’s 4%-plus money-market environment.

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    Florida’s insurance crisis and its ripple effects

    No state illustrates this perfect storm better than Florida. In 2024, the Sunshine State’s frequent hurricanes — Helene and Milton alone inflicted more than $100 billion in damages — sent homeowners’ premiums through the roof. Nearly 458,000 hurricane claims were filed statewide last year, and climate disasters since 2020 have cost Florida roughly $237 billion, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information.

    Faced with mounting losses, 16 insurers have exited Florida’s market since 2017, and another 16 have become insolvent. As of early 2025, 34 of the state’s 67 counties remain at “very high” or “relatively high” risk of hurricane damage, according to FEMA. To prop up the market, lawmakers have loosened requirements for insurers, but many carriers still balk at the elevated risk, leaving homeowners to shoulder higher premiums and limited coverage options.

    HOA fees surge: Coastal and sunbelt metro areas lead the pack

    In 2024, median HOA fees jumped more sharply in Florida than in any other major U.S. market. According to The Capitolist:

    • Tampa: Up 17.2% to $614 per month (among the 43 largest metro areas)
    • Orlando: Up 16.7%
    • Fort Lauderdale: Up 16.2%
    • Miami: Up 5.7% (median $835 per month)

    These fee increases reflect rising maintenance costs, deferred reserve funding, and new safety mandates resulting from regulatory reforms. For prospective buyers, sticker shock is setting in — especially in beachfront and high-rise communities where special assessments can run into six figures, and it may cost $30,000 upfront to join the waiting list.

    Regulatory reforms after Surfside: Tall buildings, big bills

    In June 2021, the catastrophic collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside, Fla., killed 98 residents and revealed glaring gaps in condo-association inspections and maintenance. Since then, Florida has passed a series of laws to tighten inspection cadences, mandate structural integrity reserve studies, and update hurricane-protection requirements.

    As real-estate attorney Jordan Lulich, Esq. of Lulich & Attorneys, P.A. in Vero Beach, Florida, explains, “Older high-rise condos must now complete milestone inspections, often costing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Developers sometimes buy out troubled buildings to fund necessary repairs, but resale activity remains weak compared to single-family homes.”

    From 2022 through 2025, Florida lawmakers have:

    • Mandated milestone inspections for buildings 25 years and older
    • Required structural integrity reserve studies every 10 years (for high-rises) and five years (for mid-rises)
    • Expanded emergency powers for condo associations, allowing quicker action on unsafe conditions
    • Updated building code and maintenance requirements, including stricter hurricane retrofits
    • Imposed local agency reporting deadlines (by October 1, 2025) for unsafe or deteriorating structures

    The upshot: Some owners have already faced assessments near $200,000 to shore up structural reserves, and lenders have tightened borrowing guidelines for condo purchases. In Indian River County — Lulich’s home market — single-family home sales are up 12.9% year-to-date, while condo sales have plunged 17.8%. Cash buyers dominate transactions: 133 of 176 condo closings in Q1 2025 involved all-cash deals.

    But it’s not all doom and gloom. “In our market, despite the increase in Canadian sellers, foreclosure rates have remained low compared to previous recessions, and the overall real estate market remains strong, thanks to Vero Beach’s small-town feel and low property taxes,” says Lulich.

    Coping strategies: What savvy HOAs are doing

    Across the country, boards and developers are scrambling to manage rising costs. In Scottsdale, Ariz., realtor and Compass Arizona co-founder David Newcombe (who also chairs his 217-member HOA board) highlights several best practices:

    Transparent, incremental fee increases. Rather than surprise members with a 20% bump, boards aim for smaller, predictable annual rises (3%–5%). Homeowners prefer consistency over volatility.

    Regular reserve study “desk reviews” and on-site inspections every four to five years. Newcombe cites a recent $1 million roadway repair that might have been partially budgeted with better long-range planning.

    Master-subordinate HOA structures. In master-planned communities such as 100 Hills at McDowell Mountain Ranch, where Newcombe resides, homeowners pay a one-time joining fee (1% of the purchase price) that helps maintain lower monthly dues. Turnover fees — collected when homes change hands — often generate income for reserves.

    Prudent reserve fund investing. Instead of chasing yield, boards seek a balance between liquidity, tax efficiency and capital preservation. Reserves are for major replacements, not day-to-day operations.

    Insurance optimization. While desert communities haven’t yet seen Firewise discounts, boards are pursuing community wildfire mitigation plans to qualify for future rate reductions. Nearby, Phoenix-area homeowners pay $300–$500 per month in HOA dues; some communities even collect one-time “buy-in” assessments.

    The “third leg”: Insurance costs on condos and townhomes

    Florida condo-insurance premiums jumped 40% on average in 2023, according to a report from Naples, FL-based realtor Ed DiMarco. Since 2020, some association-level policies have more than doubled. In 2024, average annual condo insurance runs $2,500–$3,500 versus just $1,000 three years ago.

    Drivers include:

    • New inspection requirements that elevate perceived risk
    • Frequent litigation over storm-damage repairs, spurring carriers to raise rates or exit
    • Unpredictable weather events (hurricane remnant floods, high winds, tornado spawn)

    Some owners have sold rather than shoulder the escalating tab. For investors, negative cash flow on a vacation property — driven by HOA dues, insurance, and taxes — often wipes out any rental income or tax benefit.

    Is a vacation home still worth it?

    “Every dollar you tie up in a second home could earn 4% or more in a money-market fund,” observes Ross Levin, founder of Accredited Investors Wealth Management. If you pay cash, factor in 1% to 2% per year for upkeep, plus insurance, property taxes and utilities (roughly 1% of home value). With a 20% down payment and a 6% mortgage, annual carrying costs can exceed 7.5% of the purchase price.

    Example: A $400,000 vacation home may cost over $30,000 a year to maintain — before furnishings, landscaping, repairs, or “toys” like ATVs or boats. Levin asks: Would you rather spend that budget on renting or family travel?

    Five action steps for prospective HOA condo or homeowners

    Request and review the reserve study

    • Obtain the most recent reserve study report (and any supplemental “desk reviews”)
    • Confirm the community has funded at least 70% of its long-term reserve requirements
    • Look for planned near-term capital projects — roofs, elevators, roadways — and ask whether special assessments are anticipated

    Understand fee-increase policies and caps

    • Ask the board or management company to share the HOA’s fee-increase history for the past five years
    • Determine whether dues increases are capped by a fixed percentage or approved by homeowner vote
    • Clarify how expense overruns are handled: Will the board levy a special assessment or tap other reserves?

    Scrutinize insurance coverage and costs

    • Obtain a copy of the master policy declaration page and confirm deductibles and limits
    • Ask how often the association rebids or renews its insurance and whether umbrella coverage is in place
    • Determine which perils are excluded — flood, earthquake, or sinkhole — and estimate your out-of-pocket risk

    Evaluate local regulatory environment

    • If considering a Florida condo, confirm compliance with post-Surfside inspection laws (milestone inspections for buildings ≥25 years old, structural integrity reserve studies)
    • In wildfire-prone areas, ask whether the HOA participates in Firewise or other risk-mitigation programs
    • Research recent special legislation (e.g., new building-code requirements, hurricane retrofits) that may trigger additional assessments

    Conduct a thorough financial and market analysis

    • Calculate total carrying costs: HOA fees + insurance + property taxes + utilities + maintenance (1%–2% of home value annually)
    • Compare projected carrying costs against potential rental income or personal‐use benefits
    • Factor in opportunity cost: If you invest your down payment elsewhere (e.g., a 4% money-market fund), could you net a comparable or better return?

    By following these five steps — reviewing reserve studies, clarifying fee policies, vetting insurance, checking regulatory obligations and running a comprehensive financial analysis — prospective buyers can make a more informed decision about whether an HOA condo or townhome still fits their retirement or investment goals.

    Pro tip from David Newcombe
    Prospective buyers need to obtain and thoroughly read the community’s Governing Documents. These include the CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions), Rules and Regulations, and Architectural Guidelines. Residents have to live by these rules (which will also include a limit on how much the HOA fees can rise yearly). If you don’t like the rules, don’t buy. For example, you may not even be able to park your car in a driveway overnight or put up a garden swing set for your kids.

    States with the highest insurance premiums

    According to Insurify, These 10 states are projected to have the largest insurance premiums in 2025, showing the projected average premium, projected increase and percentage increase:

    • Florida $15,460, $1,320, 9%
    • Louisiana $13,937, $2,974, 27%
    • Oklahoma $8,369, $607, 8%
    • Colorado $6,630, $646, 11%
    • Texas $6,522, $516, 9%
    • Alabama $5,831, $386, 7%
    • Nebraska $5,203, $478, 10%
    • Mississippi $5,198, $389, 8%
    • Arkansas $5,077, $588, 13%
    • Kansas $4,782, $226, 5%

    Is now a good time to buy a second home?

    Rising HOA assessments, property taxes, and insurance premiums have combined to make owning a second home, especially in Florida and other high-risk markets, more expensive and unpredictable than ever. Stringent post-Surfside inspection laws and inflationary pressures on maintenance and contractor costs have driven annual HOA dues up by double digits in many communities.

    Meanwhile, climate-related disasters keep insurance rates elevated or push carriers out of state markets altogether. As a result, would-be vacation-home buyers face higher monthly dues, larger special assessments, and limited coverage options. Investors and retirees must re-evaluate whether a second home still makes financial sense in today’s volatile environment.

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