Management Companies

The HOA Management Contract Clauses Boards Always Regret Not Negotiating

Most management agreements are templates the company has refined over decades to protect itself. Boards sign without redlining. Two years later, when things go sideways, the contract is the reason you can't easily leave.

The standard contract is not neutral

Boards often treat the management agreement as a formality — something to skim, sign, and file away. The reality is that the contract is the management company's strongest position. Once it's signed, every dispute is interpreted through its terms. Their lawyers wrote it. Yours probably hasn't read it.

You don't need a lawyer to negotiate a better contract. You need to know which clauses to look at and what good versions look like. This guide is the working board member's redline checklist.

1. The termination clause

This is the single most consequential paragraph in the entire contract. It controls how easily you can leave, and how much it costs.

Standard contract language (bad for you)

"Either party may terminate this Agreement upon one hundred eighty (180) days' written notice. In the event of termination by the Association without cause, the Association shall pay an early termination fee equal to three (3) months of Base Management Fees."

This means you give six months' notice and pay another three months on top. Total cost to leave: nine months of fees. For a 50-unit building paying $1,000/month, that's $9,000 just to walk away.

What to negotiate

2. The annual rate increase

Most contracts give the management company unilateral authority to increase fees annually. Without a cap, that ratchets relentlessly.

Standard language

"The Base Management Fee shall be increased annually on the anniversary of the Effective Date by an amount determined by the Management Company in its sole discretion."

"Sole discretion" is the part to fix. In practice this means 5-8% per year, compounding. After five years, your fee is up 40%.

What to negotiate

3. Out-of-scope work and "extra" fees

The base fee covers a defined scope. Everything else is extra. Most contracts don't list the rates upfront — they say "billed at our then-current hourly rates" or "as separately agreed." Both are open invitations to surprise bills.

What good looks like

An exhibit attached to the contract listing every plausible add-on with a price:

ServiceRate
Special board meeting attendance$150 flat
Annual meeting prep + attendance$400 flat
RFP coordination (per project)$300
Mass mailing (per piece)$0.85 + postage
Resident notice (certified mail)$12 each
Litigation support hours$95/hour
Other after-hours requests$125/hour

Demand this exhibit. If they refuse, walk away. The refusal is the answer.

4. Signing authority and financial controls

This is the clause that protects against fraud. Most boards never read it carefully.

What to require

The single biggest fraud-prevention move: require the bank to send paper or PDF statements directly to a board member's home address, in addition to the management company's records. The simplest reconciliation tool is two parallel records that should match. When they don't, you find out without waiting for an annual audit.

5. Insurance and bonding

What insurance the management company carries determines whether your HOA is protected when something goes wrong.

Required minimums (for any reasonable contract)

Critical clause to add

The HOA must be named as additional insured on the general liability policy AND as named insured on the fidelity bond. The difference matters legally — being a beneficiary doesn't give you direct standing to file a claim. Annual proof of insurance must be delivered to the board within 30 days of the policy renewal.

6. Vendor commissions and conflicts of interest

Many management companies receive commissions, kickbacks, or "preferred vendor program" payments from contractors they recommend (insurance brokers, landscapers, plumbers, painting companies). This is legal in most states but creates an obvious conflict.

What to require in writing

7. Data ownership and exit terms

This is the clause that bites you on the way out. Boards almost never negotiate it because they don't think about leaving when they're signing on.

What standard contracts say (badly)

"Upon termination, the Management Company shall provide reasonable assistance with the transition of records to the Association or its successor."

"Reasonable assistance" means what they decide it means. In practice: a stack of PDFs, no usable digital format, no resident roster export, no vendor contact list, no historical accounting data. Your new manager (or self-managed board) starts from scratch.

What to specify instead

8. Indemnification

Standard contracts indemnify the management company against pretty much everything. Yours rarely indemnifies you.

Required revisions

9. Auto-renewal language

Most contracts auto-renew for the same term unless either party gives notice 60-90 days before expiration. If you forget, you're locked in for another full term.

What to require

10. The miscellaneous clause that quietly matters

Look near the end for two specific terms that most contracts include and most boards never notice:

Or skip the management company entirely

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How to use this list

Print it. Sit down with the contract draft and a red pen. Mark every clause where what's in the contract is worse than what's described above. Hand the marked-up contract back to the management company with a brief cover note: "We'd like to discuss the marked sections before signing."

Watch their reaction. Reasonable management companies will negotiate most of these — they've done it before. Difficult ones will resist, push back hard, or refuse outright. That negotiation IS the vetting. A firm that won't put fair terms in writing during the courtship phase isn't going to surprise you with fair behavior after the contract is signed.

This isn't legal advice — every state has its own contract requirements and consumer protections. For high-stakes decisions, run the final contract by an HOA attorney; the $300-500 they'll charge for a one-hour review is the cheapest insurance you can buy.