Buying Florida
Didier Malagies is a leader in the Tampa Bay Mortgage industry, serving Pinellas, Pasco, Hillsborough counties, and beyond with his sights set on educating residential and commercial buyers regarding Florida purchases. With over 20 years of expertise, Didier has built relationships with realtors, bankers, and clients based on integrity and his drive to provide the best customer experience in the state by being there from beginning to end of every purchase.
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Buying Florida
Does your condominium association needs funds for a new roof or other big items
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1. HOA / Condo Association Loans (Most Common)
These are commercial loans made directly to the association, not individual unit owners.
Typical uses
Roof replacement
Structural repairs
Painting, paving, elevators, plumbing
Insurance-driven or reserve shortfalls
Key features
No lien on individual units
Repaid through monthly assessments
Terms: 5–20 years
Fixed or adjustable rates
Can be structured as:
Fully amortizing loan
Interest-only period upfront
Line of credit for phased projects
Underwriting looks at
Number of units
Owner-occupancy ratio
Delinquency rate
Budget, reserves, and assessment history
No personal guarantees from owners
2. Special Assessment Financing (Owner-Friendly Option)
Instead of asking owners to write large checks upfront:
The association levies a special assessment
Owners can finance their portion monthly
Reduces resistance and default risk
Keeps unit owners on predictable payments
This is especially helpful in senior-heavy or fixed-income communities.
3. Reserve Replenishment Loans
If reserves were drained for an emergency repair:
Association borrows to rebuild reserves
Keeps the condo compliant with lender and insurance requirements
Helps protect unit values and marketability
4. Florida-Specific Reality (Important)
Given your frequent focus on Florida condos, this resonates strongly right now:
New structural integrity & reserve requirements
Insurance-driven roof timelines
Older associations facing multi-million-dollar projects
Financing often prevents forced unit sales or assessment shock
Many boards don’t realize financing is even an option until it’s explained clearly.
5. How to Position the Conversation (What to Say)
You can frame it simply:
“Rather than a large one-time special assessment, the association can finance the project and spread the cost over time—keeping dues manageable and protecting property values.”
That line alone opens the door.
6. What Lenders Will Usually Ask For
Current budget and balance sheet
Reserve study (if available)
Insurance certificates
Delinquency report
Project scope and contractor estimate
Bottom Line
Condo associations do not have to self-fund roofs or major repairs anymore. Financing:
Preserves cash
Reduces owner pushback
Helps boards stay compliant
Protects resale values
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