How do I assess the HOA/condo fees?
Are your condo fees quietly eating your return? Here’s the quick way to uncover if you’re getting ripped off.
Why this matters
Condo/HOA fees can make or break an investment and your monthly budget. Know what you pay for. Know what risks sit behind the number.
Start with the documents
Ask for these before you make an offer:
- Current budget and year-to-date financials
- Reserve fund study and reserve fund balance
- Minutes from the last 12 months of board meetings
- Insurance policy summary and deductible amount
- Status certificate (Ontario) or equivalent disclosure
- List of pending or approved capital projects
- Delinquency report (percentage of unpaid fees)
Inspecting these files gives you a snapshot of stability and upcoming costs.

Understand what the fees cover
Break the monthly fee into categories:
- Operating expenses (cleaning, utilities, staff)
- Reserve contributions (long-term repairs)
- Insurance and property taxes (if applicable)
- Amenity costs (gym, pool, concierge)
If reserve contributions are low, expect special assessments later. If amenities cost a lot, decide if you use them.
Check reserve fund health
Healthy reserve fund signals less risk.
- Funded ratio = current reserve / reported replacement cost
- Aim for at least 30% funded ratio. Less than 10% is risky.
- Review reserve study timelines for roofs, windows, elevators.
If major work is due and the fund is low, plan for a big special assessment.
Key red flags
- Large, recent or frequent special assessments
- High delinquency rate (>5%)
- Management company churn or unresolved contractor disputes
- Insurance gaps or huge deductibles
- Vague meeting minutes or missing financials
Any of these should make you press for more detail or walk away.
Quick affordability test (simple math)
- Monthly buy-in = mortgage payment + condo fee
- Add an allowance for potential special assessments: (estimated future project cost / number of units) / 12
- If total monthly hit strains your budget >35% of income, it’s risky.

Compare to similar properties
Look at fees per square foot and the amenity level. A luxury building with a pool should cost more. But high fees without matching services are a red flag.
Use a pro to verify
A good local realtor or condo specialist reads the numbers fast and spots hidden risk. They’ll request missing records and explain trade-offs in plain language.
Next step: have a fast, independent review of the condo documents. I assess budgets, reserve studies, insurance and red flags so you can buy with confidence.
Contact: Tony Sousa — Local Realtor
Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















