TLDR
Utah requires reserve studies every six years with a three-year interim review for both condominiums (§57-8-7.5) and HOAs (§57-8a-211). Annual budgets must include a reserve line item. No post-Surfside changes have been enacted.
Utah’s HOA sector has grown alongside the state’s population. The Salt Lake Valley and Utah County have developed large numbers of planned communities over the past two decades, and many of those communities are now reaching the age where major components require their first significant repair or replacement. For boards that have not been building reserves consistently, that moment arrives as a surprise. For boards that followed the reserve requirement from the start, it is a scheduled event.
The Utah legislature has updated the Community Association Act in recent years, so boards relying on older summaries of the law should confirm current requirements. The core obligation, an annual budget that addresses reserve funding, has remained consistent, but the details around study requirements and disclosure standards have shifted. Reviewing the current version of §57-8a with local counsel is a reasonable annual step for any board secretary.
Reserve Study Every Six Years with Three-Year Review
Utah Code §57-8-7.5 (condos) and §57-8a-211 (HOAs) require reserve studies every six years with a three-year interim review for both condominiums and planned community associations. The study must identify major components, estimate remaining useful life, and calculate the funding needed. The three-year review updates cost estimates and useful life figures without requiring a new site inspection.
Annual Budget Must Include Reserve Line Item
Utah Code §57-8a-211 requires planned community associations to adopt an annual budget that includes a line item for reserve funding. The budget must address the association's obligation to repair and replace major components. A budget that allocates nothing to reserves is not compliant with the statute.
Governing Documents Often Go Further
Many Utah HOA declarations require reserve studies and reserve funding regardless of the statutory threshold. A board that relies on a size-based exemption from the statute may still be bound by its governing documents. The CC&Rs and bylaws control when they impose stricter requirements.
Rapid Growth Creates Reserve Planning Challenges
Utah's Wasatch Front has seen substantial residential development in Salt Lake City, West Jordan, Provo, and Orem. Many HOAs in these areas are relatively new, which means major components like roofs, HVAC systems, and paving have not yet needed replacement. New boards sometimes underestimate reserves because nothing has broken yet, which creates an underfunding pattern that compounds over time.
Fannie Mae Reserve Allocation Requirement
Fannie Mae Lender Letter LL-2026-03 sets two deadlines: (1) The Limited Review process for condo projects is retired effective August 3, 2026. (2) The minimum reserve allocation increases from 10% to 15% for Full Review loan applications dated on or after January 4, 2027. Associations below the 15% threshold will be classified as non-warrantable, preventing conventional mortgage lending on units in the community.
Early Reserve Planning Prevents Large Assessments
A board that establishes a reserve fund in the first years of the community's life has the longest runway to accumulate contributions before major components need replacement. Communities that delay reserve planning until the first major repair comes due typically face large special assessments. Starting the reserve study process early is the lowest-cost approach.
| Metro Area | Estimated HOA Communities | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Salt Lake City / Sandy / South Jordan | ~1,200+ | Largest concentration; mix of planned communities and condominiums |
| Utah County (Provo / Orem / Lehi) | ~900+ | Rapid growth market; many newer HOAs with no capital replacement history yet |
| Davis County (Layton / Bountiful) | ~500+ | Suburban planned community market north of Salt Lake City |
| St. George / Washington County | ~400+ | Growing retirement and resort community HOA market |
Q&A
What are the HOA reserve fund requirements in Utah?
Utah Code §57-8-7.5 (condos) and §57-8a-211 (HOAs) require reserve studies every six years with a three-year interim review. Annual budgets must include a reserve line item. Fannie Mae additionally requires at least 10% of annual budget allocated to reserves. Fannie Mae Lender Letter LL-2026-03 sets two deadlines: the Limited Review process is retired effective August 3, 2026, and the minimum reserve allocation increases to 15% for Full Review loan applications dated on or after January 4, 2027.
Q&A
Do HOA boards in Utah need reserve studies?
Yes. Utah requires both condominiums and planned communities to conduct reserve studies every six years with a three-year interim review. The study must identify major components, estimate remaining useful life, and calculate funding needed. This applies to both HOAs and condos under Utah's dual-statute framework.
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