Quick Search

Unintended Consequences of Condo Foreclosures

When you, the buyer, purchase a condo in a multi-unit/hi-rise building, you may not be aware of the unintended consequences that can arise due to your neighbor(s) defaulting on their mortgage(s) and/or condo/association fees.

Depending upon how many homeowners in your condominium building are in default–those of whom have stopped paying their mortgages and association dues–will directly impact the condominiums reserves and the funds necessary to operate and maintain the integrity of the building. As a result, the HOA (Homeowner’s Association) may have to vote to increase the association dues/and or propose a special assessment for each and every homeowner in the building to cover the short fall resulting from your neighbors’ defaulting on their loans and/or dues. This problem can be compounded depending upon how many of the condos in the building are in default.

You may be faced with having to cover the shortfall along with the remaining homeowners who continue to pay their obligations or be left with a building that cannot provide the basic services such as water, electricity, maintenance that you expected would be there without question when you first purchased your condo. This is not a pretty scenario, but it is one of which you should be aware.

If you are considering a purchase in a multi-unit building, you should review the Homeowner’s Association documents, such as C,C,& R’s (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions), Articles of Incorporation, the last 12-months of minutes, and the annual budget and audit to make sure that the association has adequate reserves which should give you an idea of the financial well-being of the building.

Moreover, you should consult with a Realtor who can give you valuable information on the number of active listings in the building that are in the process of foreclosure (short sales, notices of default), or REO’s (real estate/bank owned properties). This should send up a red flag as to the health of a particular condominium building.

Remember that what appears to be today’s good deal or “steal” may wind up being tomorrow’s bank owned property. It is wise to consult a real estate professional who is active in the local neighborhood before you jump in and become collateral damage in the future wave of further defaults.

Be Sociable, Share!

Leave a Comment


The information being provided by CARETS (CLAW, CRISNet MLS, DAMLS, CRMLS, i-Tech MLS, and/or VCRDS) is for the visitor's personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties visitor may be interested in purchasing.

Any information relating to a property referenced on this web site comes from the Internet Data Exchange (IDX) program of CARETS. This web site may reference real estate listing(s) held by a brokerage firm other than the broker and/or agent who owns this web site.

The accuracy of all information, regardless of source, including but not limited to square footages and lot sizes, is deemed reliable but not guaranteed and should be personally verified through personal inspection by and/or with the appropriate professionals. The data contained herein is copyrighted by CARETS, CLAW, CRISNet MLS, DAMLS, CRMLS, i-Tech MLS and/or VCRDS and is protected by all applicable copyright laws. Any dissemination of this information is in violation of copyright laws and is strictly prohibited.

CARETS, California Real Estate Technology Services, is a consolidated MLS property listing data feed comprised of CLAW (Combined LA/Westside MLS), CRISNet MLS (Southland Regional AOR), DAMLS (Desert Area MLS), CRMLS (California Regional MLS), i-Tech MLS (Glendale AOR/Pasadena Foothills AOR) and VCRDS (Ventura County Regional Data Share).

Date last updated: 5/16/12 9:58 AM PDT

This IDX solution is (c) Diverse Solutions 2012.