HOA Insurer

TL;DR

  • A single-family hoa association in Vermont has to satisfy two things at once: the coverage architecture specific to single-family hoa communities, and Vermont's own statutory and lender-warrantability requirements.
  • The association typically insures only common areas and amenities, not the homes themselves, so the program lives or dies on general liability, D&O, and fidelity coverage rather than a master property valuation basis.

Vermont · Single-Family HOA

Vermont Single-Family HOA Insurance

A single-family hoa community in Vermont sits at the intersection of two coverage questions. The first is structural to the association type: the association typically insures only common areas and amenities, not the homes themselves, so the program lives or dies on general liability, D&O, and fidelity coverage rather than a master property valuation basis. 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 single-family hoa master policy

A single-family HOA occupies the opposite end of the property-insurance spectrum from a condo master policy: the homes themselves are individually owned real property insured directly by each homeowner, and the association's program generally does not touch the dwelling structures at all. That reframes the entire architecture around what the association actually owns and controls, common-area land, private streets in some communities, entry features, signage, small park or greenway parcels, and any amenities the association operates directly. Property coverage on those common elements is usually a modest, well-defined limit compared to a condo or high-rise master policy, because there is no building stock behind it.

General liability becomes the center of gravity instead. Every common-area amenity the association operates, a pool, a playground, walking trails, a small clubhouse, carries premises liability exposure, and the frequency of claims tends to track directly with how much amenity infrastructure the community maintains. Boards that assume a single-family HOA is a low-exposure, low-premium placement because it insures no buildings are usually underestimating the liability side of the program relative to the (comparatively small) property side.

Directors and officers liability and a fidelity or crime bond carry the same weight here as in any other association type, arguably more, because a single-family HOA board handles assessments, reserve funds, and architectural-control enforcement with the same fiduciary exposure as a condo board but often with fewer professional-management resources backing it up. Architectural-control and covenant-enforcement disputes, a distinctly single-family-HOA exposure that a condo association rarely faces in the same volume, show up as D&O claims more often than property claims, and the program should be built with that in mind rather than treated as an afterthought behind the property line.

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 single-family hoa coverage is built regardless of state, see the Single-Family HOA practice page.

Load-bearing clauses

The clauses that decide a single-family hoa claim

Common questions

Single-Family HOA insurance: what boards and managers ask

Does a single-family HOA insure the individual homes in the community?

Generally no. In most single-family HOAs each home is separately owned real property insured directly by the homeowner under their own policy, and the association's master program covers only the common areas and amenities it owns and operates, entry features, private streets where applicable, a clubhouse or pool, shared open space. Boards sometimes assume this makes the program low-risk, but it shifts the real exposure onto general liability and board D&O rather than eliminating it.

Why does a single-family HOA need directors and officers coverage if it does not insure any buildings?

Because the board's fiduciary and enforcement exposure does not depend on whether the association insures buildings. Architectural-control decisions, covenant enforcement, assessment disputes, and vendor contracts all create D&O exposure for a volunteer board regardless of how small the property side of the program is, and single-family HOAs generate a disproportionate share of their claims from exactly those governance disputes rather than from property losses.

Free coverage review

A specialist will review your single-family 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.