HOA Insurer

TL;DR

  • A high-rise condo association in Oklahoma has to satisfy two things at once: the coverage architecture specific to high-rise condo communities, and Oklahoma's own statutory and lender-warrantability requirements.
  • Elevators, life-safety systems, wind loading at height, and vertical construction cost change the property and liability math from what a garden-style condo program uses.

Oklahoma · High-Rise Condo

Oklahoma High-Rise Condo Insurance

A high-rise condo community in Oklahoma sits at the intersection of two coverage questions. The first is structural to the association type: elevators, life-safety systems, wind loading at height, and vertical construction cost change the property and liability math from what a garden-style condo program uses. The second is jurisdictional: Oklahoma'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 high-rise condo master policy

A high-rise condo's property architecture starts from the same three-basis valuation question as any condo master policy (bare-walls, single-entity, or all-in), but every other line of the program scales with height and construction type rather than unit count. Replacement cost on structural steel and concrete curtain-wall construction runs materially higher per square foot than garden-style wood-frame construction, and a flat per-square-foot valuation formula, the kind that works well enough for a low-rise, routinely understates it for a tower. Ordinance-or-law coverage matters more here too, because a partial loss in an older high-rise often triggers a code-compliance rebuild requirement well beyond simple like-kind-and-quality replacement.

Equipment breakdown coverage carries disproportionate weight in a high-rise because the mechanical inventory, elevator banks, fire pumps, standpipe systems, building-wide HVAC and chillers, represents both higher replacement cost and a more severe business-interruption exposure than the same equipment in a low-rise building; an out-of-service elevator bank in a 30-story tower is a different-magnitude problem than the same failure in a four-story building, and standard equipment breakdown limits written at a flat figure regardless of height frequently understate it. Coinsurance or agreed-value treatment matters more at this scale too: total insured values in the tens of millions are exactly where a coinsurance clause does the most damage if the limit has drifted below the required percentage of replacement cost, so an agreed-value endorsement tied to a current appraisal is a structural feature of a well-built high-rise program, not an optional upgrade.

Wind exposure scales with elevation, so upper floors, curtain-wall glazing, roof-mounted mechanical equipment, and parapets take a harder load in a storm than a low-rise building in the same location, and coastal or named-storm programs answer that with a percentage-of-value wind or hurricane deductible in place of a flat all-perils deductible. Directors and officers coverage for a high-rise board carries its own weight given the scale of the reserve and assessment pool a tower generates, and the fidelity bond needs to be sized against that same larger pool.

Oklahoma statutory backdrop

How Oklahoma law shapes the program

Oklahoma did not adopt the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act or the Uniform Condominium Act, and it does not set a statutory property-insurance percentage for community associations. Condominiums are governed by the Unit Ownership Estate Act at Oklahoma Statutes Title 60, Sections 501 through 530. The insurance provision, Title 60 Section 526, is permissive rather than prescriptive: it provides that the unit owners may, upon resolution of a majority, insure the property against risks, without prejudice to the right of each owner to insure the individual unit on that owner's own account. It names no replacement-cost figure, no 80 percent floor, and no coinsurance standard.

Planned communities and single-family HOAs have even less statutory framing. Oklahoma has no dedicated common-interest or planned-community act for them, so they operate as nonprofit corporations under the Oklahoma General Corporation Act at Title 18, and their insurance obligations come entirely from the recorded declaration and bylaws. That same Title 18 framework is what supplies board indemnification and the authority to purchase liability insurance for directors and officers, which is why the D&O placement in Oklahoma is best read against the corporation statute and the governing documents together.

The practical consequence of no statutory floor is that the operative property bar is set elsewhere. For any association with owners who finance or refinance, that bar is the Fannie Mae Selling Guide, which requires coverage equal to 100 percent of replacement cost for a loan to be warrantable. An Oklahoma association can be fully compliant with state law and still fail a lender insurance review, because state law asks for so little. Size the property program to the declaration and the lender standard, confirm it is written on replacement cost rather than actual cash value, and do not treat the absence of a statutory number as permission to underinsure.

For the full Oklahoma picture, including reserve and inspection requirements and market commentary, see the Oklahoma state page. For how high-rise condo coverage is built regardless of state, see the High-Rise Condo practice page.

Load-bearing clauses

The clauses that decide a high-rise condo claim

Common questions

High-Rise Condo insurance: what boards and managers ask

Why does a high-rise condo need equipment breakdown coverage more than a low-rise building?

A high-rise runs elevator banks, fire pumps, standpipe systems, and central HVAC or chiller plants that represent both a larger replacement cost and a more severe operational impact if they fail than the same equipment in a low-rise building, an out-of-service elevator bank in a 30-story tower is a materially different problem than in a four-story building. Standard property forms exclude internal mechanical and electrical breakdown by default, and a flat equipment breakdown limit set without regard to the building's actual height and mechanical inventory frequently falls short.

How does a coinsurance clause create risk on a high-rise with a large total insured value?

A coinsurance clause requires the insured limit to equal a set percentage of full replacement cost, commonly 80, 90, or 100 percent, and on a high-rise valued in the tens of millions that threshold is easy to drift below as construction costs rise, since the limit is rarely re-appraised as often as costs move. If the limit slips under the threshold, the carrier pays only a proportional share of even a routine partial loss, and on a building of that size a limit that has slipped just a few points can turn a manageable claim into a large shortfall funded through a special assessment. An agreed-value endorsement tied to a current appraisal removes that penalty.

Free coverage review

A specialist will review your high-rise condo program against Oklahoma'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.