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Article Courtesy of
Bankrate
By Linda Bell and Brooklyn Lowery
Published March 22, 2026
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Homebuyers often focus on home prices and mortgage rates when thinking about
affordability. But for millions of homeowners, another housing cost is
creeping higher and quietly reshaping the math: homeowners association (HOA)
fees.
Once considered a small maintenance expense, HOA dues are increasingly
acting like a shadow mortgage. This mandatory, ongoing monthly payment can
rise unexpectedly and, in extreme cases, even put a home at risk of
foreclosure.
That possibility has Jo Meleca-Voigt, a 55-year-old, disabled and retired
public educator, worried.
In 2021, Meleca-Voigt and her wife, Christine, bought their townhouse in
Rochester, New York. The home’s accessibility features and an HOA that
handled exterior maintenance drew them in. The couple, who live on a fixed
income, budgeted for the monthly $235 HOA fee.
But over five years, their dues jumped over 60% to $385 a month. On top of
that, came two special assessments in 2023 totaling $3,000 to rebuild the
HOA’s reserve fund and repair the community’s aging roofs. Meleca-Voigt and
her wife needed to dip into their savings to cover the surprise bills — not
an easy move when every penny counts.
“This is absolutely a shadow mortgage,” Meleca-Voigt says. “It’s actually
worse than a mortgage. If you get a mortgage with a fixed rate, you know
what you pay and you can work around it.”
HOAs can offer real benefits by managing residential communities, helping
maintain shared spaces and providing amenities, like pools or gyms. But
there’s a tradeoff: According to Realtor.com, the median HOA fee has risen
to $135 per month, up from $125 last year and $108 in 2019. This rise comes
as the number of properties with HOAs is also climbing. Almost 85% of
townhomes and condos have HOAs, while 33% of single-family homes do.
“It’s something that’s a little bit more accepted than it was maybe 10, 20
years ago, paying HOA dues every month,” says Joel Berner, senior economist
at Realtor.com. “As it becomes more common, it’s kind of a race to the
bottom where one neighborhood can say, well, the neighborhood down the
street is charging 200 bucks a month for HOA fees. So we can probably bump
ours up a little bit, too.”
The housing bill that never goes away
With sticky inflation and the cost of labor and materials continuing to
increase, HOA fees are rising as well, now eating up a significant portion
of overall housing costs.
For example, in the Miami–Fort Lauderdale–West Palm Beach area, the average
HOA fee is $617 per month for a median home costing roughly $425,000,
according to Realtor.com. That’s nearly 27% of a typical mortgage payment.
“These [rising costs] are effectively pricing them out of living in the home
that they bought,” Berner says.
In addition to monthly dues, special assessments can be even more shocking.
The periodic fees are used to cover major repairs or expenses not covered by
the HOA’s budget or reserve fund. Special assessments can sometimes rival
the size of a small mortgage, depending on the property’s type and location.
“In downtown San Diego, we have seen some high-rise buildings have special
assessments in the tens of thousands of dollars,” says Kimberly Schmidt,
team lead of Kimberly Schmidt and Associates with Compass in San Diego,
California. “For example, all of the plumbing in the building needs to be
redone, and every unit’s portion of that will be $80,000. That’s where it
feels like a shadow mortgage. We’re not talking about $50 or $100.”
Even after you fully pay off your mortgage, HOA fees continue to cast a
shadow on your finances. Unlike a mortgage, they can’t be refinanced,
renegotiated or turned into equity.
“Not only are these homeowners struggling to keep up their [HOA] payments
and keep the lights on in their home, but when they go to sell because they
can’t afford it anymore, they’re meeting buyers who are more reluctant to
make that purchase,” says Berner. “It’s just a lot of friction in the
market.”
HOAs reduce your purchasing power
Rising HOA dues can impact your purchasing power differently depending on
where you stand in the housing market. For current homeowners like Meleca-Voigt,
rising dues increase the overall cost of living.
“When we sat down and figured out what it was going to cost us to live here,
we understood that HOA fees could go up,” she says. “But we didn’t think
they would go up more than 50%.”
Experts say buyers should count on those increases. “A homebuyer should
always assume that the HOA fee will increase over their tenure as an owner,”
Schmidt says. “If the HOA has not been adequately funding their reserve
account, the result can be deferred maintenance in the community itself,
dues increases or special assessments to the homeowners.”
For prospective buyers purchasing a home with an HOA, the impact starts even
earlier. HOA dues reduce purchasing power before someone even gets the keys,
since lenders factor HOA costs into debt-to-income calculations.
“HOA fees can potentially limit the buying pool for a community, forcing
buyers to look elsewhere or to seek out a less-expensive home in the
community,” Schmidt says. “Less expensive often translates into a home that
is smaller, less upgraded and/or in a less desirable location.”
The mortgage equivalent of rising HOA fees
As of the third week of March, mortgage rates averaged 6.27%, according to
Bankrate’s lender average. According to Bankrate’s “How much house can I
afford” calculator, every $100 in monthly HOA dues erases around $16,000 in
purchasing power, acting like a silent mortgage that limits the home you can
buy.
|
Monthly HOA fee |
Lost purchasing power |
| $ 100 |
$16,200 |
| $ 200 |
$32,400 |
| $ 300 |
$48,600 |
| $ 400 |
$64,800 |
| $ 500 |
$81,000 |
| $ 600 |
$97,200 |
| $ 700 |
$113,400 |
HOA fees can impact your equity and housing value
If you miss mortgage payments, fees, interest and potentially legal costs pile
on, raising your balance and shrinking your home equity, which is your home’s
value minus what you owe. Unpaid HOA dues, with their own late fees, interest
and attorney costs, can eat into your equity, too.
Normally, as you pay down your mortgage, your equity increases. But if your
home’s value isn’t rising faster than the remaining balance and you need to
sell, the HOA debt still has to be settled, cutting into your housing stake,
explains Ashley Morgan, attorney, owner and founder of Ashley F. Morgan Law, a
law firm based in Virginia.
“By increasing in a linear fashion these HOA fees every year, you’re diminishing
the value of the asset, the home that you bought and you’re so eager to maintain
the value of,” Berner says. “We’re not in 2022 when home values are just
shooting through the roof, and so these little pieces on the margin really make
a difference.”
Still, HOA fees aren’t always negative. A well-managed association uses your
dues to fund repairs and conduct maintenance or to rebuild reserves, all of
which can make a property more attractive and marketable.
“The value of what the community looks like, that does add value to our home,”
Meleca-Voigt admits. “That is something that people comment on when they come to
our house, just what a great little community it is. There is value that the HOA
brings for somebody who does have the financial ability to keep up with the
increases. It’s very appealing.”
You can lose your home if you don’t pay
Living in an HOA community means agreeing to follow its rules and its covenants,
which are legally binding and part of the property’s documents of record. Just
like a mortgage, HOA dues are attached to your home. If you don’t pay, the debt
doesn’t simply disappear.
“Any debtor can file a lien against the property,” says Brian Fox, chief revenue
officer of Benutech, a real estate data solutions firm based in Southern
California. If you get far enough behind on payments, state laws will determine
when your HOA can file the lien. “They’re doing that to protect their owed
money.”
A lien is a legal claim that secures a debt to real estate. In simple terms, it
means you can’t sell or refinance your home without first paying off what you
owe. The number of HOA liens is growing.
According to data from Benutech, HOA liens totaled 284,933 in 2025, up 8.6% from
262,446 in 2024, with Florida, Texas and California leading the way.
If the lien isn’t resolved, in some cases, the HOA can initiate foreclosure
proceedings to recover unpaid dues, even if you’re current on your mortgage
payments. Typically, if your home is sold in foreclosure, the mortgage gets paid
first, then the HOA is paid afterwards.
But there are exceptions.
In several states, including Nevada, Tennessee and Washington, D.C, to name a
few, HOAs have “super-priority” lien rights, which means they can jump ahead of
your mortgage lender if you fall behind on dues.
For a growing number of homeowners, HOA debt has led to the unfortunate loss of
their home. Between 2022 and 2025, HOA-related foreclosures jumped 50%
nationally, according to ATTOM Data Solutions, with Florida, Texas and
California as the states with the most significant activity.
Before buying a home in an HOA community
Treat HOA dues like part of the mortgage. When buying a home with an HOA, the
listing price typically does not include the monthly HOA cost, so it can easily
be overlooked when determining what your budget can handle. Because HOA fees are
ongoing and can rise over time, it’s smart to stress-test your budget to make
sure you can manage potential fee increases in the future.
Review the HOA agreement: Before purchasing a home with an HOA, request the HOA
contract. Take the time to carefully review all documents so you know all of the
rules before moving in. Check the association’s budget and reserve funds, as
some HOAs are managed more effectively than others. It’s also helpful to read
recent meeting minutes to see if there are discussions about deferred
maintenance, potential lawsuits or upcoming special assessments.
Be cautious of very low dues. While lower fees may seem attractive, they can
sometimes signal that the HOA isn’t setting aside enough money for future
repairs. If reserves are too low, the HOA may need to charge homeowners special
assessments, or large, one-time fees, to cover unexpected costs.
Living in the shadow of HOA debt
When you buy a home in an HOA community, there’s no opting out of the fees or
special assessments. But that doesn’t mean you’re powerless. If you decide to
challenge fee hikes or special assessments in court, Morgan’s advice is to be
smart about it.
“If you’re going to do that, escrow the money,” she says. “If someone says,
‘you’re this far behind,’ you can say, ‘I have the $20,000. It’s just, I don’t
think I should have to pay for XYZ reasons.’ The judge is going to take you way
more seriously.”
The key, Morgan stresses, is communication. Talk to the board. Try to negotiate
a plan where you’re paying down what you owe while staying current, so you’re
not stuck in a constant cycle of playing catch-up. In some cases, she says it
might make sense to prioritize paying your HOA over other debts, even your
mortgage.
“Your mortgage [company] is probably going to offer you a modification,” she
says. “Your mortgage [company] is probably going to have a forbearance program.
Your HOA tends to depend on that money more. So they’re less likely to be
reasonable. They’re less likely to reduce balances. Settlements are a lot less
likely.”
Meleca-Voigt’s HOA gave her the option of paying the $3,000 special assessment
bill in installments, easing some of the financial strain. In 2023, her wife
also joined the HOA board, giving them firsthand knowledge of how their
community operates.
But even with those wins, Meleca-Voigt and Christine are planning their next
move. For the past 18 months, they have been looking for a more affordable, HOA-free
home that can accommodate Jo’s disability.
After being outbid for potential homes five times, Meleca-Voigt feels stuck, as
the fear of rising HOA fees continues to cast a shadow over her finances.
“If the HOA keeps increasing, we have no choice. We have no option,” she says.
“It’s scary. I’m 55. I hope I’ve got 30 good years left. If this is what it’s
like five years in, what are we going to do?”
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