How to Choose a Trustworthy HOA Management Company
Most boards pick a management company by Googling, getting three quotes, and signing with whoever showed up most professional. Here's a better way — with the questions that actually surface red flags before you commit.
Why this is harder than it looks
HOA management is a low-margin, high-volume business. Your local market probably has a handful of established firms and a long tail of regional or owner-operated outfits. They all sound similar in a sales pitch: "full-service," "responsive," "transparent," "decades of experience." None of those words mean anything.
The differences only show up after you've signed — when an owner files a complaint and nobody returns calls for two weeks, or when the year-end financials don't reconcile and you can't get a straight answer about why.
Vetting up front is your only real protection. Once the contract is signed, switching management companies is painful (90-day notice clauses are standard) and can cost the HOA real money in transition friction.
Before you start: what kind of management do you actually need?
Three rough tiers, with very different price points and accountability:
| Tier | What they do | Typical cost |
|---|---|---|
| Financial-only | Collect dues, pay bills, produce statements. You handle vendors, meetings, owner relations. | $8-15/unit/mo |
| Full-service | Above + vendor management, owner communications, board meeting support, compliance tracking. | $15-35/unit/mo |
| On-site | Above + dedicated property manager on-premises, usually for 100+ unit buildings with amenities. | $50+/unit/mo or salary |
Most boards default to "full-service" without asking whether they actually need it. If your community is stable and your board is engaged, financial-only management plus self-handled communication often works fine — at half the cost. Be honest about which tier matches your situation before you start collecting bids.
The 12 questions that surface red flags
About the company
- How many associations do you currently manage, and how many of those are similar in size to ours? Look for a portfolio that includes properties roughly your size. A firm that mostly handles 200-unit luxury towers will deprioritize your 24-unit walk-up.
- What's your average client tenure? Good answer: 5+ years. If they dodge the question or quote "we have very loyal clients" without numbers, that's a tell.
- Can I have references from three current clients of similar size? Then actually call them. Ask the references "what frustrates you about working with them?" — that question gets honest answers, "are you happy with them" doesn't.
About the people
- Who specifically would manage our account? Get a name. Then ask how many other associations that person manages. Industry average is 8-12 properties per manager. Above 15, your account gets shortchanged.
- What's the turnover rate among your community managers? Good firms know their number and are proud of it (under 20% annually). Bad firms have no idea or get defensive.
- What happens when our manager is on vacation or leaves the company? Look for a clear handoff process. "We'll figure it out" means you'll get dropped.
About money
- What's NOT included in the base fee? The honest answer is a list. Common add-ons: special meeting attendance, mailings, legal coordination, vendor RFPs, accounting cleanup. Get the per-event prices in writing.
- How do you handle vendor kickbacks or "preferred vendor" arrangements? Some management companies receive commissions from vendors they recommend. That's a conflict of interest your board should know about. Ethical firms disclose; unethical ones get angry at the question.
- Who has signing authority on our bank accounts, and how do you prevent fraud? Look for: dual-signature requirements above a threshold, board-controlled signing for amounts over a certain dollar, monthly bank statement copies sent directly to a board member (not through the management company).
About transparency
- How often do we get financial statements, and what's in them? Monthly is standard. The package should include: balance sheet, income statement, budget vs. actuals, AR aging, bank reconciliation, and check register. If they hesitate on any of those, that's a problem.
- Can board members access the books in real-time, or do we have to ask? Modern firms give boards continuous portal access. Old-school firms make you request reports. Real-time access matters because it's the difference between catching a problem in week 1 vs. month 3.
- What's your process for handling owner complaints about the management company itself? A defensive answer is a flag. The right answer involves a clear escalation path that goes around the day-to-day manager — usually to a regional director or owner.
Red flags that should disqualify a firm
- Won't show you a sample monthly financial package from a current (anonymized) client. Means their financials probably aren't presentable.
- Pushes a long contract term (3+ years) with steep early-termination fees. Trustworthy firms know you can leave; that confidence shows in their contract terms.
- Vague answers about insurance. They should carry general liability ($2M+), errors & omissions ($1M+), and a fidelity bond covering the maximum cash on hand for your association at any time.
- Refuses to disclose vendor commissions. Always disqualifying. If they take money from vendors and won't say so, they're not on your side.
- "We've been doing this for 30 years" as the answer to almost every question. Tenure isn't competence. Some of the worst firms have been bad for 30 years.
- The owner of the company personally pitches your account but you'll never speak to them again after signing. Common bait-and-switch.
What to negotiate before signing
Standard contracts are written for the management company's protection, not yours. Boards routinely sign without negotiating these clauses, and they shouldn't:
- Termination clause: 60-day mutual termination without cause. Many contracts default to 90 or 180 days.
- Annual rate increase cap: tie any increase to CPI or 3% maximum, whichever is lower. Otherwise expect 5-8% per year.
- Insurance certificates on file: require the management company to provide proof of their insurance annually.
- Fidelity bond named insured: your HOA should be a named insured on their fidelity bond, not just a beneficiary. Different legal status, much better protection.
- Clear out-of-scope rates: get hourly rates for everything not in the base fee, in writing. "We'll discuss it as needed" is how surprise bills happen.
- Data ownership: when you terminate, the management company must deliver your financial records, vendor contracts, and resident roster in editable digital format within 30 days. Specify this. Otherwise you'll get PDFs of scanned printouts.
- Vendor independence: you retain the right to choose vendors. The management company can recommend, but the board approves.
The "trust but verify" rule for the first year
Even after careful vetting, treat year one as probation. Specifically:
- Have a board member reconcile the bank statement independently for the first six months. Not "review the reconciliation" — actually do it. You'll catch errors and discover quickly whether the books are clean.
- Spot-check three vendor invoices per quarter: confirm the work was done, the price matches the contract, the invoice matches what was paid.
- Read every set of monthly financials within a week of receipt, not just before the annual meeting. Patterns of small errors predict large ones later.
- Document every issue and response time. After 12 months you'll have a real performance record, not a vibe.
Considering self-management instead?
Modern software replaces 80% of what management companies provide for a fraction of the cost. Candor handles invoicing, financial reporting, reserve planning, and resident communications — designed for self-managed HOAs that don't want to pay $10K-15K/year for software they could run themselves.
Try the demo →The bottom line
The biggest mistake boards make is treating the management company decision like a procurement exercise — comparing prices and signing with the lowest. The right approach is treating it like hiring a senior employee. The cost difference between firms is usually $50-100/month per unit. The quality difference between firms is the difference between a financially healthy HOA and a board scrambling to clean up after a special assessment that shouldn't have been needed.
Spend the time on vetting up front. Ask the uncomfortable questions. Call the references. Read the contract. The 10 hours you spend now is the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy.
If you're a board member who recently went through a management company search and learned something we missed, we'd love to hear from you — [email protected].