HOA Insurer

TL;DR

  • A condo hoa association in Connecticut has to satisfy two things at once: the coverage architecture specific to condo hoa communities, and Connecticut's own statutory and lender-warrantability requirements.
  • Coverage turns on which of the three valuation baskets, bare-walls, single-entity, or all-in, the recorded declaration actually requires, not on which one the program happens to have.

Connecticut · Condo HOA

Connecticut Condo HOA Insurance

A condo hoa community in Connecticut sits at the intersection of two coverage questions. The first is structural to the association type: coverage turns on which of the three valuation baskets, bare-walls, single-entity, or all-in, the recorded declaration actually requires, not on which one the program happens to have. The second is jurisdictional: Connecticut's statute, its lender-warrantability climate, and its market conditions shape how that program has to be sized, documented, and placed. This page covers both, and how they meet.

The coverage architecture

What drives a condo hoa master policy

A condo master policy is built around a single decision the declaration makes for the board, not the board's agent: how far into each unit the association's property coverage reaches. Bare-walls stops at the unfinished interior surfaces of the perimeter walls, floors, and ceilings, leaving everything inward of the drywall to the unit owner's own HO-6 policy. Single-entity covers the original developer-installed interior fixtures and finishes but not later owner upgrades. All-in reaches the original installations plus subsequent improvements and betterments. Programs drift out of alignment with the declaration constantly, usually after a renovation, a reconstruction following a loss, or a developer-to-owner turnover amends the governing documents while the policy renews on autopilot against the old basis.

Once the valuation basis is set correctly, the rest of the architecture follows a predictable shape: a master property form sized to full replacement cost (not actual cash value, which most lender reviews reject outright), a general liability form covering common areas and association operations, a directors and officers form protecting the volunteer board, and a fidelity or crime bond covering anyone who handles association funds. The fidelity bond is usually sized as a multiple of monthly assessments plus reserves on hand, and it needs to extend to a management company if one handles the deposits.

The master-policy deductible sits on top of all of this and is the piece owners feel directly. When a covered loss hits the building, the association absorbs the master deductible first, commonly in the low five figures on a modest program and reaching into six figures on a larger or coastal building, and boards routinely pass that cost through to owners as a special assessment. The owner-side backstop, loss assessment coverage on the individual HO-6 policy, defaults to a modest sublimit under most standard homeowners forms unless the owner specifically buys it up, so the gap between the master deductible and the default HO-6 sublimit is where boards get blindsided after a loss rather than before one.

Connecticut statutory backdrop

How Connecticut law shapes the program

The Connecticut Common Interest Ownership Act, at Connecticut General Statutes Section 47-255, requires the association to maintain property insurance on the common elements, and in a condominium or cooperative on the units to the extent described, against risks of direct physical loss, in an amount of not less than 80 percent of the actual cash value of the insured property at the time the insurance is purchased and at each renewal date, exclusive of land, excavations, foundations, and other items normally excluded. The section also requires commercial general liability insurance in an amount set by the executive board and the declaration. It applies to common interest communities generally, with a limited exemption for a building containing no more than two units divided by a single boundary, and it may be varied for communities restricted to nonresidential use.

Section 47-255 also requires the association to maintain fidelity insurance, but unlike Virginia the statute does not prescribe a formula or a dollar amount, so the practical standard comes from the governing documents and the Fannie Mae Selling Guide fidelity expectation rather than from the statute itself. Older condominiums created before the CIOA took effect may also sit under the earlier Condominium Act at Connecticut General Statutes Section 47-83, so confirm which chapter governs the specific community before reading its insurance duties.

The 80 percent actual-cash-value floor is the key practitioner point. It sits below the 100 percent replacement-cost standard the Fannie Mae Selling Guide (section B7-3) requires for a conventional loan to be warrantable, so a Connecticut association can satisfy CIOA and still fail a lender insurance review. Size the property program to replacement cost and the lender bar rather than the statutory minimum, and confirm the coverage is written on replacement cost rather than actual cash value.

For the full Connecticut picture, including reserve and inspection requirements and market commentary, see the Connecticut state page. For how condo hoa coverage is built regardless of state, see the Condo HOA practice page.

Load-bearing clauses

The clauses that decide a condo hoa claim

Common questions

Condo HOA insurance: what boards and managers ask

What is the difference between bare-walls, single-entity, and all-in condo coverage?

Bare-walls coverage stops at the unfinished interior surfaces of the unit, so drywall, flooring, cabinets, and fixtures are the owner's responsibility under their own HO-6 policy. Single-entity covers the original developer-installed interior finishes and fixtures but not later owner upgrades. All-in covers the original installations plus subsequent improvements and betterments. The recorded declaration is supposed to control which basis applies, and the master policy should be read and confirmed against it at every renewal, not just at the point the board first bound the program.

Who pays when a master-policy deductible gets applied after a covered loss?

The association pays the master deductible first, out of reserves or through a special assessment to owners. Each owner's personal HO-6 policy is meant to pick up the assessed share through its loss assessment coverage, but the standard sublimit on that coverage is modest and often well below the actual per-unit share of a large deductible. Boards that document the master deductible in dollar terms and communicate the matching HO-6 loss assessment limit owners should carry avoid the surprise showing up for the first time after a loss.

Free coverage review

A specialist will review your condo hoa program against Connecticut's requirements within one business day.

Send your declarations page and governing documents. You get a plain-English, requirement-by-requirement review, not a sales call.