HOA Insurer

TL;DR

  • Washington HOA/condo insurance: association-type-specific coverage architecture for Condo HOA, High-rise condo, Single-family HOA, and the other association types active in the state.
  • Built around governing-document coverage requirements, lender warrantability standards, and the regulatory framework specific to Washington associations.

Washington common-interest communities

Washington HOA and condo insurance, split between two statutory regimes and an actual-cash-value floor that sits below the lender standard. WUCIOA or the older Condominium Act applies depending on formation date, and both set an 80 percent floor

Washington runs two parallel community-association insurance regimes at once. Communities created on or after July 1, 2018 fall under the Washington Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act, while condominiums created between 1990 and mid-2018 remain under the older Condominium Act. The first practitioner question is always which statute governs the community, because the answer changes what the board actually owes.

Both regimes set the same modest property-insurance floor, and it sits below the standard a conventional lender applies at a unit sale. We read a Washington program against the correct statute for the community, against that lender bar, and against the earthquake and wildfire exposures that a master policy does not cover by default.

A specialist will review your policy within one business day. No marketing sequences, no list rental.

Last updated 2026-07-08

WA

Washington HOA & condo insurance

Cluster shape

What concentrates in the Washington book

The Puget Sound corridor drives the market, with dense Seattle, Bellevue, and Tacoma condominium and high-rise stock carrying the full valuation-basis and warrantability exposure, plus equipment-breakdown exposure on taller buildings. Formation date sorts these buildings between the two governing statutes.

Planned communities and single-family HOAs across the suburbs and into eastern and central Washington center on common-area property, amenity liability, and D&O. The interface communities in the drier eastern half of the state carry a wildfire profile that the coastal metros do not.

Regulatory

The Washington statutory backdrop

For communities created on or after July 1, 2018, the Washington Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act, at RCW 64.90.470, requires the association to maintain property insurance on the common elements and, in most communities, the units, in a total amount, after 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 date. The same section also requires commercial general liability coverage and, distinctively, fidelity insurance, though the statute names fidelity as a required line without prescribing a dollar formula for it.

For condominiums created between July 1, 1990 and July 1, 2018, the older Condominium Act, at RCW 64.34.352, sets a parallel property standard: not less than 80 percent of actual cash value, exclusive of land, excavations, and foundations, plus liability coverage. That older act does not carry the WUCIOA fidelity requirement, so the fidelity conversation depends on which statute governs the building.

The key practitioner point is that both floors are expressed as 80 percent of actual cash value, which 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 Washington association can satisfy its governing statute and still fail a lender insurance review, so size the property program to replacement cost and the lender bar, and confirm the coverage is written on replacement cost rather than actual cash value.

Market commentary

How the Washington market actually behaves

Two exposures the statutory floor does not address define much of the Washington conversation. Earthquake sits over the entire western part of the state through the Cascadia subduction zone and the Seattle fault, and a standard master property policy excludes it, so boards decide separately whether to buy a difference-in-conditions or standalone earthquake layer and how to fund the deductible. Wildfire drives the eastern and central interface communities, where property capacity has tightened the same way it has across the interior West.

Placement runs through the dedicated community-association markets, sized to the building type, the seismic and wildfire exposure, and the governing statute. The two recurring gaps are a program written to the 80 percent actual-cash-value floor rather than to full replacement cost, and an assumption that earthquake is somewhere in the master policy when it is not.

Washington coverage review

A specialist will review your policy within one business day.

Send your governing docs, master policy declarations page, or lender letter - whatever you have. A specialist returns a plain-English review within one business day.

Free coverage review

A specialist will review your policy within one business day.

No marketing sequences, no list rental. Specifically for Washington HOA and condo associations.