How to Collect Delinquent HOA Fees

Source: http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/home-thoughts/delinquent-hoa-fee-collection/

As difficult as it may be, there’s really only one way to deal with homeowners who aren’t paying community association fees: Get tough!

No one enjoys forcing payment plans, filing liens, or even foreclosing on their neighbor’s home. But when homeowners don’t pay their homeowners association fees, the rest of the neighbors must pick up the slack through higher fees, special assessments, or reduced spending on community upkeep and amenities.

The cost of delinquency
Nationwide, non-payment of HOA fees is among the top problems facing condo, single-family, and other planned development associations today, says Thomas M. Skiba, chief executive officer of the Community Associations Institute in Alexandria, Va.

Just a few homeowners who stop making HOA fee payments can cut into an association’s budget quickly. Annual HOA fees average $420 for single-family homes and $2,400 for condos, the U.S. Census Bureau says.

If too many homeowners stop paying their HOA fees, lenders may be unwilling to make mortgages or refinance properties in the community. Fannie Mae, for example, won’t guarantee loans in HOAs where more than 15% of the homeowners are 30 days or more overdue on HOA fees. That can hurt property values.

Act fast to collect overdue HOA fees
The sooner action is taken to collect past-due accounts, the better off everyone is. “We have been absolutely unforgiving on paying dues,” says Peter Mannetti, president of the Beauvallon HOA in Denver. With 25 of the 200 units in foreclosure, the association waits only 60 days before telling delinquent owners that the HOA is going to place a lien against the title to their home.

“We haven’t forgiven one late fee, one fine, one legal fee,” he says. “We don’t care if the dog ate your (payment) coupon. Some people do have hardships, but the minute you let one slide, you have a problem.”


How to collect overdue fees
If you serve on your HOA’s board, try these tips for collecting dues:

1. Seek help from experts. Consult your community association’s attorney and read for yourself what the bylaws say you can do about delinquent homeowners. Weigh the costs of the actions your board could take.
Legal fees for letters demanding payment can run $200 to $500 per home, but each case is different. Suing a homeowner individually and trying to garnish wages to collect delinquent fees could cost $2,000 or more. Your community’s attorney may be able to recommend a collection agency with experience working on HOA cases.

Foreclosing on a homeowner who owes back dues could cost much more and won’t result in payment unless the unit is worth more than the value of any mortgages and liens already on the property, plus attorney, home-sale, and court costs.

2. Offer a payment plan to owners in financial distress. Divvy up the delinquent amount into monthly installments, Gottlieb says. Some associations may try for a 12-month plan, but a six-month deadline with an option to renew seems to produce better results, she says.

3. Put a lien on the house. A lien is a court document that tells title companies the HOA has to be paid when the home is sold or the homeowner refinances his mortgage. A lien probably won’t generate a payment until owners sell their home or refinance their mortgages, says attorney Loura Sanchez in the Denver suburb of Arvada.
Others disagree. Winston Park Association President Miles Moss says demand and warning letters, followed by liens, work in his Miami-area community, even when the homeowner has no plans to sell or refinance.

4. Sue the homeowner and try to garnish wages or bank accounts. Some, but not all, states allow HOAs to sue homeowners for unpaid dues and then garnish the homeowner’s wages or bank accounts, Sanchez says. Taking a case all the way to trial could cost the HOA several thousand dollars. Having an HOA officer take the case to small claims court may be an option in your area.
5. Talk to your association’s attorney about reverse foreclosure. Some communities in Florida are using a legal technique called reverse foreclosure to force banks to foreclose on unit owners who are making neither mortgage nor HOA fee payments. The move forces the bank to go ahead and foreclose on the unit. Once the bank owns the unit, it then has to make the HOA payments.

Source: http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/home-thoughts/delinquent-hoa-fee-collection/



This blogger believes that our past posts regarding the past failures of this HOA to properly and fairly enforce dues collection eventually resulted in positive reform of our HOAs dues collection practices. To read our opinion regarding posting the names and address of delinquent homeowners on this blog, read the email at the following link: 
http://tuhb.wordpress.com/2013/09/28/legal-opinion-on-disclosing-member-delinquencies/