A townhome & pud association in New Mexico has to satisfy two things at once: the coverage architecture specific to townhome & pud communities, and New Mexico's own statutory and lender-warrantability requirements.
Coverage architecture turns on whether the building is insured per structure or under one blanket limit, and on how cleanly the shared party wall is allocated between adjoining owners.
New Mexico · Townhome & PUD
New Mexico Townhome & PUD Insurance
A townhome & pud community in New Mexico sits at the intersection of two coverage questions. The first is structural to the association type: coverage architecture turns on whether the building is insured per structure or under one blanket limit, and on how cleanly the shared party wall is allocated between adjoining owners. The second is jurisdictional: New Mexico'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 townhome & pud master policy
Townhome and planned-unit-development programs sit in a different structural category than condo master policies because ownership usually runs to the ground beneath the unit rather than to an airspace boundary inside a larger building. That changes the first architecture question from valuation basis to insuring structure: does the association carry a single blanket property limit across every building in the community, or does each building (or each unit) get insured individually. A blanket limit spreads risk and simplifies claims administration, but it needs periodic reconciliation against actual replacement cost as the community adds buildings or as construction costs move, or the aggregate limit quietly falls behind total exposure.
The party wall or shared wall between attached townhome units is the exposure a detached single-family HOA never has to think about and a high-rise condo handles completely differently, because a townhome party wall sits inside one structure shared by two separately owned units rather than inside a single building owned entirely by the association. Governing documents typically assign the association responsibility for the party wall and the exterior structure while leaving unit interiors to the owner, similar in spirit to a condo's bare-walls basis but built around attached, ground-up construction instead of a stacked building. A fire or water loss that starts in one unit and crosses the party wall creates a subrogation and cost-allocation question between the association's policy, the affected owner's HO-6 or landlord policy, and the neighboring owner's policy, and that allocation should be worked out in the governing documents and the insurance program together, not improvised after a claim.
PUD common areas, private streets, retention ponds, entry monuments, community mailboxes, and small shared amenities, carry general liability and property exposure similar in kind to a single-family HOA's amenity risk, but layered on top of the attached-structure property questions above. Directors and officers coverage and a fidelity bond round out the program the same way they do for any association, sized to the community's reserves and monthly assessment volume.
•Party-wall and shared-wall fire or water loss crossing between two separately owned attached units
•Blanket versus per-building or per-unit property valuation falling out of sync with actual replacement cost as the community grows
•Ambiguity in governing documents over which party (association, owner, or neighboring owner) is responsible for a party-wall loss
•Directors and officers liability for the volunteer board
•Fidelity/crime bond sized to reserves and monthly assessment volume
New Mexico statutory backdrop
How New Mexico law shapes the program
For condominiums, the New Mexico Condominium Act at NMSA 1978 Section 47-7C-13 requires the association to maintain property insurance on the common elements against direct physical loss, in a total amount, after application of deductibles, 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, exclusive of land, excavations, foundations, and other normally excluded items. For buildings with horizontal boundaries, stacked units, the coverage must include the units but need not include improvements and betterments installed by unit owners. The statute also requires liability insurance, including medical payments, in an amount set by the executive board but not less than any amount specified in the declaration.
That 80 percent actual-cash-value floor is the key practitioner point. It is below the 100 percent replacement-cost standard the Fannie Mae Selling Guide (section B7-3) requires for a conventional loan to be warrantable. A New Mexico condominium can satisfy Section 47-7C-13 and still fail a lender insurance review, so size the property program to replacement cost and the lender bar, not the statutory minimum, and confirm the master policy is written on replacement cost rather than actual cash value.
Section 47-7C-13 governs condominiums, not planned communities. New Mexico planned communities and single-family HOAs sit under the Homeowner Association Act at NMSA 1978 Sections 47-16-1 and following, which does not set a specific statutory property-insurance percentage. For those associations the governing documents and lender requirements control the property standard, so the declaration and any applicable lender guide, rather than a statutory floor, are what a program must be measured against.
For the full New Mexico picture, including reserve and inspection requirements and market commentary, see the New Mexico state page. For how townhome & pud coverage is built regardless of state, see the Townhome & PUD practice page.
Load-bearing clauses
The clauses that decide a townhome & pud claim
→Insuring structure: blanket limit across all buildings versus per-building or per-unit valuation
→Party-wall/shared-wall responsibility and cost allocation between adjoining owners
→Common-area and private-infrastructure general liability (streets, retention, shared amenities)
→Fidelity/crime bond sized to reserves and assessments
→Directors and officers liability for the volunteer board
Townhome & PUD insurance: what boards and managers ask
Who is responsible for insuring a shared party wall between attached townhome units?
It depends on how the governing documents assign responsibility, and that assignment should match the insurance program rather than being left to be argued after a loss. Many townhome declarations put the association in charge of the party wall and exterior structure while leaving unit interiors to the individual owner's policy, similar in concept to a condo bare-walls basis but built around attached ground-up construction. A fire or water loss that crosses the party wall between two units can trigger claims against the association's policy, both owners' individual policies, and a subrogation question between insurers, so the declaration language and the master policy need to agree on where the boundary sits before a loss, not during one.
Should a townhome or PUD association insure each building separately or under one blanket limit?
Both approaches are common, and the right answer depends on the community's size and how consistently its buildings were constructed. A single blanket limit across all buildings is simpler to administer and smooths out the loss experience, but it needs to be reconciled periodically against actual current replacement cost as the community adds phases or construction costs rise, or the aggregate limit can fall behind total exposure without the declarations page ever flagging it. Per-building or per-unit valuation is more precise but requires more maintenance at each renewal.
Free coverage review
A specialist will review your townhome & pud program against New Mexico'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.