HOA Insurer

TL;DR

  • A self-managed hoa association in Vermont has to satisfy two things at once: the coverage architecture specific to self-managed hoa communities, and Vermont's own statutory and lender-warrantability requirements.
  • Without a management company absorbing day-to-day fund handling and compliance, the board carries fidelity and D&O exposure directly, and the endorsements a managing agent would normally carry have to be picked up somewhere else or go missing entirely.

Vermont · Self-Managed HOA

Vermont Self-Managed HOA Insurance

A self-managed hoa community in Vermont sits at the intersection of two coverage questions. The first is structural to the association type: without a management company absorbing day-to-day fund handling and compliance, the board carries fidelity and D&O exposure directly, and the endorsements a managing agent would normally carry have to be picked up somewhere else or go missing entirely. The second is jurisdictional: Vermont'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 self-managed hoa master policy

A self-managed association's architecture is not defined by a different property or liability exposure than a professionally managed association of the same type, it is defined by who is missing from the risk chain. A managed community typically has a management company handling deposits, disbursements, and day-to-day compliance, and that company usually carries its own fidelity/crime coverage (sometimes required to name the association as an additional insured or loss payee) as a second layer of protection around the association's funds. A self-managed board has no such second layer: whichever board members or volunteer treasurer handle deposits, checks, and reserve transfers are the entire fidelity exposure, and the association's own bond is the only protection against theft or misappropriation rather than a backstop behind a management company's coverage.

That same gap shows up in day-to-day compliance work a management company would otherwise absorb: insurance renewal tracking, lender warrantability documentation, reserve-study scheduling, and governing-document compliance all fall to volunteer board members who are not doing this as their full-time job. Programs for self-managed associations should be built assuming no professional backstop exists anywhere in the chain, which means the fidelity bond needs to be sized generously against reserves and assessments (since there is no management-company coverage to lean on if the association's own bond falls short), and the renewal process itself needs a checklist a volunteer board can actually execute without a property manager driving it.

Directors and officers liability carries extra weight for the same reason: a volunteer board making the same fiduciary decisions, contracts, assessments, enforcement, that a professionally managed board makes, but without professional-management guidance informing those decisions day to day, faces a higher likelihood that a good-faith decision gets challenged as a governance failure. General liability and property coverage on the association's common areas and amenities look the same as they would for a comparable managed association of the same type; the differentiator is entirely on the fidelity and D&O side, and in how thoroughly the program's paperwork and renewal cadence are actually tracked without a management company doing it.

Vermont statutory backdrop

How Vermont law shapes the program

Vermont Title 27A, Section 3-113 requires the association to maintain property insurance on the common elements, and on the units in a condominium to the extent the statute describes, against risks of direct physical loss, in a total 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 normally excluded items. Section 3-113 also requires commercial general liability insurance and fidelity insurance covering the persons who control or disburse association funds.

That 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. A Vermont association can satisfy Section 3-113 and still fail a lender insurance review, so size the property program to replacement cost and the lender bar rather than to the statutory minimum, and confirm the coverage is written on replacement cost rather than actual cash value.

One Vermont-specific wrinkle: Title 27A took effect on January 1, 1999, and Section 3-113 is not among the sections that Section 1-204 applies to communities created before that date. Older Vermont associations are therefore governed by their own declarations and bylaws and by lender requirements rather than by the statutory insurance floor, which makes the governing documents the controlling text for that segment.

For the full Vermont picture, including reserve and inspection requirements and market commentary, see the Vermont state page. For how self-managed hoa coverage is built regardless of state, see the Self-Managed HOA practice page.

Load-bearing clauses

The clauses that decide a self-managed hoa claim

Common questions

Self-Managed HOA insurance: what boards and managers ask

Why does fidelity bond coverage matter more for a self-managed HOA than a professionally managed one?

In a professionally managed association, the management company typically carries its own fidelity/crime coverage as a second layer around the funds it handles, often naming the association as an additional insured or loss payee. A self-managed association has no management company and therefore no second layer, so the association's own fidelity bond is the only protection against theft or misappropriation by whichever board member or volunteer treasurer handles deposits and disbursements. That bond needs to be sized generously against reserves and assessment volume precisely because there is nothing behind it if it falls short.

What compliance work does a self-managed board need to track that a management company would otherwise handle?

Insurance renewal timing, lender warrantability documentation, reserve-study scheduling, and governing-document compliance (assessment procedures, meeting notice, enforcement consistency) are all tasks a property manager typically drives for a professionally managed association. A self-managed board needs to track all of it directly, usually with a checklist a volunteer can actually execute, since missing a renewal deadline or a lender documentation requirement has the same consequences whether or not a management company exists to catch it.

Free coverage review

A specialist will review your self-managed hoa program against Vermont'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.