More than 80% of newly-built single-family homes sold in 2019/2022 belonged to an HOA. during the 2004 housing boom-home prices were significantly inflated, leaving people unable to sell later because they owed more on the house than it was worth. I know several people who bought during that time, thinking it was a good investment, but it wasn’t until the COVID housing boom that prices finally returned to those original levels.
To balance out your real estate holdings, I suggest investing in equities. If you're cautious, even the worst recessions can present fantastic buying opportunities. Additionally, volatility can produce fantastic short-term purchase and sell opportunities. This is not financial advise, but you should buy immediately away because money isn't king right now!
You're right. I was able to diversify my 450K portfolio across markets with the aid of an investment coach, and I was able to use high dividend yield stocks, ETFs, and bonds to generate a little over $830K in net profit.
Would you mind providing details on the advisor who helped you? saving for a pension through a corporate program since the age of 18. I hit greater tax along the road, so I increased my company pension with a SIPP (tax benefits). I'm now 50 and would love to expand my finances more aggressively; there are a few automobiles I still want to drive and a few mega-vacations that I still want to take.
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with Melissa Terri Swayne for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
Thank you for this tip. It was easy to find your coach on the web. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her resume.
I have told this many times. I had an HOA advise me that they had voted my property into their HOA and that I had 30 days to come into compliance. I sent a response that I was not part of their HOA. 30 days later I started receiving violation notices in my mailbox. I sent a cease and desist letter. A month later, I received a notice of intent to seize my property if I was not in compliance in 10 days. Two weeks later I received notice of a scheduled hearing. At the courthouse, the attorney for the HOA recognized me and asked if I represented the homeowner, and I told him that I was the homeowner. I told him that I was not part of the HOA and they had been advised of that in writing several times. In court, the HOA president told how I had ignored all notices and refused to pay fines. When it was my turn, I asked her how long the property had been a part of the HOA, she gave the date they had voted my property in. I asked her if she had membership documents signed by me. She said "No, you refused so we voted you in" The judge, and their attorney both said HUH ? ? ? I then asked her about putting violation notices in my mailbox and she said that was the only way since I refused to install a notice box at my garage door. I asked her if she realized that putting main in a US mailbox was a federal crime. She said "not in a HOA" I saw their attorney shake his head. The judge asked her how she thought that the HOA could vote someone in without their consent, she said the annexed the property according to their by-laws. I asked the judge for a judgment as a matter of law, and consideration of my counter-claim. The judge said "granted to both, state your counter-claim" I outlined my compensatory damages, and then asked for putative damages in the amount of $5000 per violation notice, and an additional $10,000 for the frivolous case. The judge granted $350,000 in putative damages, and just over $50,000 in actual damages for time, and earnings lost responding and researching their claims. HOA woman said that the HOA could not pay the judgement. I told the judge that I would accept the vacant 20 Acres of association property adjoining my property with the release of HOA claims. The HOA voted the next week to release the property and remove Caren (Yes her name is Caren) as HOA president. I found out that she wanted my property as access to the additional acres the HOA had purchased to build additional homes to sell. Subsequently, the members of the HOA voted to dissolve the HOA as without the additional anticipated acreage income, they could not continue to fulfill the HOA obligations. The entire neighborhood (save a few) is much happier with the HOA gone.
I can sort of agree with this - but you are also making a choice to live in one. I know many cities (Phoenix, LV, Cali) it's DIFFICULT to not be in one, but it can be done.
Unfortunately, not everyone has the option of not having an HOA. I currently live in Hawaii, and to the best of my knowledge, all townhouses and condominiums have an HOA, and at the moment, that is all that I can afford. When I first moved in, the fees were reasonable. But now, it has gotten out of control. What I pay in monthly maintenance fee, would pay for a two bedroom apartment or even a mortgage on the mainland. To make matters worse, we do not have any kind of amenities that would justify the fees we pay. No swimming pool, rec center, or even a park for goodness sake. What really takes the cake is that we have elderly people who are on a fixed income, and this is not even taken into consideration. I now totally understand why we have so many homeless people here who actually do have a job. It's totally crazy.
inquiry the HOA what´s going on with the fees, go to the meetings. Group up with your neighbours to vote out the HOA board. This monday we have a meeting and is election year to vote for the HOA president and 3 counselors( election every 2 years), we are hopping to vote him out. wish me luck.
Unfortunately, there can STILL be HOA covenants on a "no HOA" property, as long as there's no HOA fees. I tried my hardest to find a lot w/o an HOA and the best I could do was one w/ a few basic covenants of varying annoyance.
NO HOA means nothing. I looked @ buying an apt in DC. It was about $300k. That price left me extra money to redo the kitchen. Then I read about how the elevator needed to be replaced in the bldg. Obviously it was an older bldg bc it's east coast city living. Basically, everyone in the bldg was going to have to pay $10,000 a piece to replace and install a new elevator. Homeownership isn't for everybody.
That is why, as mentioned in the story, non-HOA properties increase in value faster than HOA properties. An HOA property may cost more when built/first sold, but gains value more slowly due to less appeal to future buyers.
How is HOA not tanking home values? Who in their right mind would want to pay money for some Karen to tell them how to live? Sounds like a living hell to me.
I have always lived in homes with no HOA. Never been a problem with those said issues. Most cities have ordinance enforcement that will take care of major issues like unkept homes or abandoned cars. People who support HOAs are just fear mongers.
My father in law got on the HOA board when they moved to AZ. When my husband and I visited them we took a walk. My husbands mother made a big deal because some man had his garage door open. I asked her what the big deal was. She said , well, burglary. I said that's his problem. What she really meant is that everyone was supposed to have the doors closed. For a uniform appearance. I think board members are people that need their little bit of power. I'd NEVER live with a HOA
We live in an HOA and are quite happy here. Your anecdote does not characterize all HOAs, any more than one swallow makes a summer. If somebody wants to live as they please (which, of course is impossible) they should live in the mountains and eat grass.
I say shut your garage door…nobody wants to see a known ghetto nosy body door breather across from them…that’s been a long going ghetto associated human function .
The issue is that either the renter or the owner must in some way pay insurance and property taxes if they want a "permanent roof" with utilities like electricity, gas and water. Because of this, many people-at least in California, where I currently reside-are living in tents. No taxes, rent, mortgages, or insurance. The number of people who tell me they live in their car that I meet amazes me. Its crazy out here!
I get such worries too. I'm 50 and retiring early. Already worried of the future and where its headed, especially in terms of financies and how to get by. I'm also considering making my first investment in the stock market, but how can I do so given that the market has been in a mess for the majority of the year?
Since the outbreak of 2020, which significantly affected the market, I've been consulting an investment coach before making any investment decisions because their entire philosophy is built around employing a high-profit orientated plan while simultaneously trading long and short, as well as decreasing risk exposure as a hedge against inevitable downtrends. When coupled with their access to odd data and analysis, underperformance is virtually impossible.
I won't pretend to know everything, though. Her name is Melissa Rose Francks but I won't say anything more. Most likely, you can find her basic information online; you are welcome to do further study.
Live in car is much easier if you have a big car. The only problem then is where to shower + brush. I tried, it's doable except for the shower part. Buy a gym membership would take care of shower
They have to get a judgment then a court order to be able to either garnish wages or place a lien on your home. Its not just the flick of a pen. The couple claiming they knew nothing are hiding their ignorance and failure to respond to a long stream of notices from the HOA.
@@HighCrimesMisdemeanors maybe, maybe not. Regardless, their entire neighborhood was underwater. That was likely a very corrupt HOA. Nice try blaming the victim tho. 👌
And lie, cheat and pocket HIA dues not cashing checks which were delivered like 38 years. That sends paying homeowners into foreclosure. It almost happened to me. In addition lost a home sale due to repairs not being done to decks, which are due was raised for for 3 years.
"No HOA" is a huge selling point for real estate listings. We specifically bought our house because it was NOT in an HOA. Our neighborhood is cool because every house is different and most owners take pride in maintaining the neighborhood. We don't want to pay $200 monthly to a faceless company to manage our landscaping. We'll look after it ourselves, thank you.
hell yeah but I think the problem starts with the developer because when they build a subdivision I think they're the ones that decide, initially that is, if that development is going to have a HOA or not and it wouldn't surprise me if the builders and developers are in bed with the HOA companies so it becomes not about doing what makes sense but what makes more money and getting hundreds a month out of people's homes for as long as it's standing so that's a massive incentive to encourage the requirement to start a HOA in new development it's a scam
Our HOA just sent us a notice about a car parked illegally on the road, and said we would need to rectify this violation within 10 days. -- We responded by informing them there is no such car at our residence and that they should at least know who's house is who's and that we expect them to rectify this mistake within 10 days.
Wow the same exact thing happened to me a few months ago! They sent a notice that I owed a fine and a picture of a car parked along the street but that car wasn’t even near my house! I’ve never seen the car before. I told them to remove the fine or send better proof, they removed it
The federal government needs to step in and HEAVILY regulate the existence of HOAs limiting their abilities such as handing out fines and placing liens on people’s homes.
I lived in An HOA years back and i can tell you I hated it so much. The lady was right it’s like signing over your rights. You’re essentially letting people who did not contribute into buying your house have full power over what you with your own property. From what color your house is to what sign you have in your yard or windows or where your trash can is sitting it’s crazy.
@@DanielRivera-q6eit’s is a problem with the country. The law caters to these bully control freaks, not many places in this world would they enable petty low lives to abuse power in a HOA like this
Odd how they never stated the fact that HOAs were initially set up to manage watershed issues and nothing else. Either limit HOA authority or eliminate them.
HOAs were originally set up to keep neighborhoods racially segregated. But they try to keep that hush hush, because then more people might question the historical value of such an institution.
My wife and I purchased our house in 2001. We refused to consider one that had a HOA! HOA is like living in an apartment, someone telling you what you can and can't do with your house!
HOA: the solution for people who want the equity that comes with ownership without the authority and self determination that should come with it… 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
I bought a beautiful first floor condo in 2013 as my first home. Lots of really cool older folks lived there. Even older residents sat on the board and kept re-electing themselves regardless of what the bylaws said. I’m a USMC vet and the rules said I could fly a flag. I chose a Marine Corps flag and was promptly sent a photo of my balcony with said flag and a warning to remove my flag as it offended other residents. My neighbors above and next to me asked why I took it down and I showed them. They insisted that I fly it again and started paying my fines for me while raising hell with the board. Long story short they rallied the other residents up and got me elected as Vice President of the board which in turn gave me more leverage to get a couple other younger residents on it. We removed them, found out they stole a bunch of money, the courts seized their units and we changed a bunch of rules and made it a fun place to live.
As soon as I find out a home is part of an HOA, I immediately lose interest in the property. Why would I to live in a community that tells me what color I am allowed to paint my house or what kind of pets I can own? It's ridiculous. Imagine spending half a million dollars for less freedoms than you have when renting.
Many HOA board members "secretly" own the vendors that they use... lawn work, irrigation, concrete, pesticides, property managers, etc. There needs to be a law allowing residents to see the actual bids from vendors and a law that vendor affiliations need to be disclosed by board members and property management companies! It is the residents' money paying these vendors, but the bids are hidden from them... not fair!!!
there is a law, it civil court, you have to take them to court to force them to divulge their associations, it costs money and they can retaliate. HOA is a deal with the devel
My buddy works for a top 5 builder by volume in Michigan, owners are lawyers, they also own the company they sell the houses to if they haven’t sold in a year to rent them and not sink the value of surrounding homes. Regardless, they always maintain at least two residences in every neighborhood because they also run the HOA, two votes gives them automatic power to veto anything trying to be changed so they retain complete control of all aspects of the neighborhood. It’s disgusting
My wife and I recently bought our first home and the one thing we both agreed on was no matter how perfect the house may be if it is in an HOA we pass. Fortunately, where we live there are plenty of older neighborhoods without any of that BS. Everyone around us takes care of their home out of pride of ownership not because someone will fine you if your grass is too long.
Based on our previous home we told the real estate agent "NO HOAs!!!" It worked out great. Sure, my neighbors have big RVs and trucks, but that didn't stop our house prices from doubling.
Those neighbors with big RVs and trucks, and CHICKENS, will be a Godsend for your family in the next Great Depression or WWIII. It can mean survival or not. The trucks can bring water or set up a defense perimeter. I love the freedom of my neighbors, and I keep my eyes on my own property, not on what they might or might not have. I literally don't care if somebody has THEIR OWN CAR up on blocks. We NEED mechanics in an emergency.
@@davidb2206 One day a bear went across our back yard, went to the neighbors, climbed a tree and dropped into their fenced chicken area. You should have heard the squawking.
Funny people are against trucks. I own a 2023 Ram 2500. It cost more then 90% of luxury cars out there that people like to show off. Cost more then a Tesla.
We are basically giving control of our homes over to a corporate board staffed by Karens. How are the American people allowing this? We’ve definitely gone soft.
Look what happened to the 2020 election. Is it really a surprise people are this lazy and stupid? There was a time these people would be tarred and feathered for these kinds of actions.
It's the nature of neoliberalism and olicharcy. The US is an oligarchy, with both of the state approved political parties owned by the same corporate donors.
The city administration allowed the HOA so the city doesn't have to maintain roads, sidewalks, drains, cleaning etc. and still collect the property tax
An HOA with a bad reputation can not only devalue your home, it can make it almost impossible to sell. Speaking from experience. There is a beautiful neighborhood near me that I used to own a house in. It takes about twice as long to sell a house there and they sell for less than in neighboring areas that do not have HOAs.
The arriving family is expected to pay the balance and late fees of the previous tenants, or at least when the house was sitting vacant? They weren't even THERE yet, how is that their fault? The residents tried to get in contact with the HOA for 6 YEARS and still hadn't gotten a response; when it goes to court and the HOA's lawyers hash out a payment plan, the HOA is ignorant of that plan. Why should the couple continue to pay monthly dues and fines to an HOA that doesn't even acknowledge their existence and actions? These people should have moved out the same day they moved in. Now, they may not even be able to find a buyer who would be saddled with the remaining balance that THEY would be leaving behind.
I was in a HOA community once. Never again. For a community that can tells me what I can and cannot do to my house they need to be paying my mortgage and taxes. Never never never buy into a hoa community.
I live in an Hoa community. For 12 years and I like not looking at cars jacked up and being worked on in driveways, I like not looking at a school bus parked in someone's driveway. I like the fact that my nextdoor neighbor can't paint their house purple or pink. I like that my neighbors also can't let their lawn grow 4 feet tall. If you like the things I mentioned then your right an HOA is not for you.
I learned pretty quick to NEVER, under ANY circumstances whatsoever buy property in one of these unconstitutional traps. I own my own property and as long as I'm not doing anything expressly illegal NO ONE has any right to tell me what to do or how to paint my door or anything of the sort.
Actually, they do if THEY create the by-laws, and YOU read them and buy there anyway. In doing so, you're accepting those conditions. Saying "they have no right" is an emotional response, not a legal or logical argument.
@@MrDCMiami cool bro. Then I'll build a giant pumpkin launching trebuchet and proceed to pumpkin pie every member. I guess you can't read? Literally says I'm aware of the trap and would never be stupid enough to buy property in one
@@kylewilliams9907 I know what you said in your opening sentence. But it is YOU who can't (or refuse to) read: "NO ONE has any right to tell me what to do or how to paint my door or anything of the sort." They most certainly do, if you consent to living there!! Do you know the meaning of the word "IF?"
@@GNMi79 Another dummy outs himself. They have that right for whoever chooses to buy/live there, and that's why he chose not to live in an HOA managed community. He contradicted himself.
I just moved to a neighborhood without an HOA - first time I've never lived under an HOA....it's bliss. States and counties love HOAs because it takes the burden of maintenance off of them - nothing will change until people start lobbying their local representatives.
Its bliss until your next door neighbor decides to paint his house Purple and Green while storing 6 inoperable cars in the drive way. Wow sounds like bliss.
@@joeshmooo5327 I honestly would not care. Limiting what someone does on their property is stupid. Unless they are making crack let them live their lives happily
@joeshmooo5327 It's called freedom and the only people with that many cars own a big lot. HOA is just another form of segregation cuz you're paying extra not to have lower class living amongst them. I live in non-HOA and it's not like that. Plus there's laws about inoperable vehicles and uncared for homes, HOA is technically useless.
I only looked at non-HOA homes when shopping and got a great one! When I hear the horror stories several friends are having with their HOAs, I realize that buying a non-HOA home was the best decision I've ever made.
My wife and I looked into a place with an HOA and when I asked about the rules they said it was really relaxed and they seemed shocked when I asked them for the rule book so I could read it. It turns out they you had to get approval if you wanted blinds that weren’t white, changing your oil in you driveway was considered major maintenance and not allowed, and they allowed you to have a boat in the back yard but only if it was behind a fence yet fences were only allowed to have a single wide man gate. I will personally never live in an HOA.
I have lived in four homes with HOAs, all of them a pain. One of them had a woman on the board who helped herself to walk onto our properties, all the way to the backyards, to poke around and look for issues. And she lived across the street from us. What a nightmare! I called her our neighborhood Nazi. If you are looking to buy home, the first thing you should check is whether or not there is a HOA. If there is, don't buy!
Most of the homes not in an HOA have terrible schools or are in the ghetto. So unfortunately unless you're open to moving to another city or state, you're stuck either renting or paying an HOA. Here in Florida, we're lucky if they don't have a CDD fee. Finding a home not in a HOA and in a good neighborhood means you're going to overpay for an old house or move somewhere in the middle of no where.
@@Shorty15c4007yeah, or, how about this, have proper municipal bylaws in place that prevent people from their homes become a dump. This HOA/Ghetto thing seems like a uniquely American issue
@@woodrmp1 It would be nice if voting worked, but whats the point if money talks and lobbyists can bribe the person voted into office? Everyone is corruptible in this system and the working class doesn't really have a say in the matter. Seems like you're either lucky enough to snag something during the pandemic, or you're stuck in the aftermath with homes being sold for 3x what they were worth in 2019.
fear a housing crash due to people buying homes above asking prices with little equity. If prices drop, affordability and potential foreclosures may arise, worsened by future layoffs and rising living costs. I want to invest more than $300k, but I'm not sure on how to mitigate risk.
Consider reallocating from real estate to other reliable investments like stock, crypto or precious metals . Severe recessions offer market buying opportunities with caution, as volatility can yield short-term trading prospects. Not financial advice, but it may be wise to invest, as cash isn't ideal in this period.
It's often true that people underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to around $750k.
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Melissa Terri Swayne” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her a outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her.
I've been house hunting and I've noticed some sellers are getting sneaky about the neighborhood being in an HOA. If it says something like "covenants are in place to protect your investment" it just means HOA, or POA. I was charmed by one adorable place, until they said no dogs were allowed, not even as visitors. I don't even have a dog, but that just felt wrong. They insisted it wasn't an HOA, except for the fee for maintenance of communal spaces, and the list of rules. So even HOAs know they're not desirable to a lot of people.
Whiny Boy...Stop crying You signed that contract....not me and YOU Agreed to let someone tell you what to do...and if You didn't YOU have Nothing To Cry About...YOU just like to stick YOUR Nose in other peoples business and lives.... It is actually very simple ...Don't like it don't sign ...If you did sign...Stop whining !
@@Steven-xf8mz Taxes fix the roads, clear snow, open libraries, give unemployment insurance, food banks, community centers, public school, homeless shelters, money to raise kids, and some healthcare. And HOA does...?
@@seekittycat You don't know what HOA do, and you have the audacity to comment? LMAO! Do you think HOA is some sort of imaginary company that shows up and take your money and ran away? HOA is ran by the community at large, the money collected are tracked and spend, and retained balance are stored in a saving account as reserve for the community at large. Depending on the setup of your HOA; some of the things HOA could be paying are master insurance that covers earthquake, flood, and fire, road repair as it's privately owned by the community, water bill if water are not divided, common area such as gym, pool, club room, etc, building repair, organizing community events, coordinate with fire dept to make sure building and safety are up to code, deal with your bad neighbors, general cleaning, gardening, etc..... I would encourage you to understand what HOA do before you establishing a negative view toward it. If you still have the same perception after some research, then that's when I say people are entitled to different views. If you don't live in a HOA currently or have lived in one before. I would recommend you to reach out and find an annual financial statement, it would layout what the expenses are in general. The HOA often don't retain much after expenses, you may disagree with some of the expenses, and that's totally fair. The company that performs the daily tasks are often paid at fixed cost annually + administrative cost, the HOA boards don't make money as they're all voluntary. If you would like to know more in depth, you could run for a board. All I'm saying is I would encourage you to understand before forming a negative perception of something...
@@Steven-xf8mzI mean yes but did you watch the video. Ofc not all but many people have issues with hoas. Even the stats at the end represented most people do not wan to live with a hoa
When I was looking for my first home, a house with an HOA was always a dealbreaker for me, didn’t care how nice the home was. Very glad I stuck with that. It’s insane how much power these HOAs have.
HOA is the worse. I just sold my home 6 months ago and moved into a traditional clean neighborhood with no HOA. Although I was fully aware of the HOA when I first bought my previous home, the rates just went up insanely. I started at $80/month and within 3yrs I was paying $300/month. Their justification was always landscaping cost for which we didn't even have grass. We had a bunch of cheap bushes. We had 1 pool and a very small playground for the kids. No gym, no cleaning crews on-site. In fact the HOA was sold to different agencies and in the end the agency was "managing" us from a city that was over 50miles away. They rarely answered calls or emails. When we sold our home they charged us 3k to transfer the HOA to the new owners. It was the a horrible experience considering how expensive they are and how much control they have over your home.
I bought my home in 2019 in a neighborhood that was built in the mid 70's and no silly HOA however I heard from my neighbor that some people were going around the neighborhood taking votes to bring HOA and he told nearly all the people voted for NO HOA 😊👍🏿
@sarysa I would pray and hope that they would be grandfathered in and NOT have to be part of the HOA. However, I'm pretty 100% damn sure that the newly established HOA would give the homeowners of that grandfathered home an extremely hard time and would be a pain in the ass about it. And then you'd have the other homeowners/neighbors in that community complaining about why they are required to be HOA members but not the grandfathered home.
@sarysa No. There have been times where an HOA has popped up and tried fining people that aren't part of the HOA and it's always ended up in court with the HOA normally getting disbanded.
My sister owns a condo in Fontana California, ( San Bernardino County) every year they raise the fees the max allowed. The fee is now $800/ month. People are having a hard time selling these homes. It's an absolute racket! I would like for you guys to interview the communities that have been scammed by the hoa managers. Some of these people get away with stealing MILLIONS.
I would never buy a house in an HOA, but if I were to give them an offer, it'd be at least $50k less than asking price. HOAs can burn in hell. Someone is going to tell me "whoa, hey man, not all HOAs are bad". That may be true, but just the thought that they have the power to govern your life and treat you like a child and harass you is enough for me to never even consider an HOA home. This sword of Damocles ever present above your head, it's beyond me how anybody would want to live like that. It's as if you don't even own your home. Work your @ss off to buy a home, and then some Karen gets to decide what you can or can't do with your home.
HOA here in Colorado has gotten so bad that laws are being enacted to limit their power. It's gotten so bad that it was obvious that their goal was to force the homeowners into foreclosure then publish the auction in small rural newspapers that nobody reads so that only "their selected" bidders would show up. These HOS have become brutal and they are not there to protect you.
This is part of why im so scared to buy a home here. I have a family, and i want to make a lovely home without restriction on what color i can paint my house, or what type of naturalist lawn i want to put in instead of grasses that shouldnt grow here. Im afraid to put myself into a half a million dollar home, struggle to pay the mortgage and pmi, only to have an HOA swoop in develop, apply liens, and steal my home from under me. Nightmare inducing, when all i want is to put my family in a house and live peacefully
Live in a rural area and we do not have an hoa. This past year we had someone that came up and asked if we would like to start a hoa within our community. They ended up having the cops called on them and were arrested for stolen mail in their vehicle.
Actually, if they're interested in property values, I don't have a problem with them. What's criminal, is when they're interested in forcing some owners out, nit-picking about aesthetics--like mailbox color, landscape plant choices, solar panels, flags, and decor, and trying to foreclose on homes. When they're interested in FINEING owners, rather than helping the homes keep their value, that's a problem. When they're interested in making profits, that harms property values.
@@DanielRivera-q6e I'm not disagreeing with you, but HOA's could have a use. What needs to change, is their complete lack of oversight, regulation, transparency, and grievance resolution. They should NEVER be allowed to take someone's house. They should rein in their profitability. If we're required to be in them to buy a new home, they should have some SERIOUS limitations on what they can and can't do.
That guy said it best in the beginning: HOAs are usually liked by people that like to have a cookie cutter experience and want to feel important and included. I would rather rent for the rest of my life than buy a home and have zero control over what colour I can paint my house or how to care for my lawn or garage.
Never join or move into an area with an HOA. If your neighborhood decides to form one opt out of joining. Never agree or sign anything from the HOA. It doesn't matter how nice the house looks or seems to be. Most HOA's will end up costing you more. You shouldn't have to take the HOA to court to have things done right by you.
My HOA experience: When I left the garbage can out over 24 hours because I was gone traveling, the HOA stole it. At first I had no idea where it was until I mentioned it to a neighbor; when I called the HOA to ask if they knew where it was and they told me they took it. Put it in their maintenance shed a mile away. Told me they would not return it and I had to find a neighbor with a vehicle big enough to get it back since mine wasn’t. Rules and regs only said they would fine for that not steal the can. Also, I got written up for having a garden hose in the front yard when they did their yearly inspection (they don’t say what date it will be) so I had to put the hose away and call back for a reinspection or they would start fining me. And I had a talking to from the block captain after my boyfriend changed the oil in his car in the driveway, once. My current home has no HOA so none of this BS drama.
Yeah HOAs are just a bunch of busybodies with no life who want to power trip on their neighbors. They're usually the least qualified to run the neighborhood because anyone halfway competent would have better things to do. That also means these people are usually too dumb to understand concepts of fiduciary duties and instead think they can do whatever they want.
Its amazing how much personal freedom American's are willing to give up now a days to feel safe and comfortable. You can't let others tell you what you can do with your personal property. I am sad at the loss of the real America.
A lot of the times you don't have a choice but to move into an HOA. HOAs increase the value of homes not in an HOA as folks will pay a premium to not have to deal with them.
I think ppl are more concerned with what their neighbors are doing with their property. Like renting them out to ppl who don’t take care of the property. Or investors leaving homes abandoned and being unreachable when squatters move in
I could never live in a HOA. Many people I know live in HOA housing and usually don’t have any problems, but it’s the lack of control over your own home is the issue. One of my coworkers wanted a privacy fence, turns out she can’t. The other fell in love with a certain color shingles for her roof, turns out the HOA wouldn’t allow that color. It’s little things that can add up, and while your current HOA is fine and dandy, things can always take a dramatic turn for the worst. I would and will always vote against HOAs. I love that I can do what ever the hell I want to do to my home.
As people were saying in opposition before the Revolutionary War, "Why would I exchange one king living 1000 miles away for 1000 kings living one mile away?" Instead of kings, though, now we have HOA board members.
The recent you’re complaining about is the reason that people want HOA what’s the color roof that she wanted pink with purple polkadots? Some people like to live in the communities without somebody expressing their artistic values on their house. They want you to cut your lawn regularly and not park cars on the lawn.
After living in a strong HOA community in Florida, I will never buy another piece of property that is under HOA DOMINATION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! As more people wake up, the value of homes will decrease in HOA communities.
Did an HOA once. It was good for about 10 years but then it wasn't. Board of director positions in HOA seem to attract all the petty tyrants and power tripping people. One of the questions in this video was does an HOA make property more valuable. In my opinion it makes it less valuable. For example I will never purchase another home with any kind of HOA. I think houses without them are more valuable. Never again
I agree. We bought our first home in 2010 and no HOA. We specifically wanted to avoid HOA's because the whole point of moving from renting to ownership for us was so that you don't have someone looking over your shoulder and telling you what you're allowed to do. We want to have pets, paint our house according to our choice of colors, landscape our yard as we wish, etc. I will never buy a home with an HOA. Total deal-breaker. So yes, from my viewpoint, as one who values individuality and freedom of expression, they reduce home values.
My HOA used to alright, then this little weasel, her parents died and she inherited the house, completely useless her whole life and weaseled her way onto our HOA as President and is trying to turn it into one of those terrible HOAs. People stopped going to meeting because they hate her so much.
As they mention in the video, there's good ones and bad ones. Good ones mean tidy yards, maybe some nice amenities, and very little management. Bad ones mean over management and big fish in tiny ponds. If it's an area with the former, people tend to pay more for the well-kept neighborhoods than the ones with junkyards. If it's the latter, people like to avoid them unless they desire that lifestyle.
Sure, you say that now. Wait until your neighbor, in your NON HOA neighborhood paints his house lime green, starts restoring some "classic" car in his garage which he welds on till midnight every night. Starts to build an illegal non-permit room addition, starts to raise pit bulls, adult kids move back home with alcohol and drug issues......you will be PRAYING to move back into a HOA neighborhood!
The man who wrote America's National Anthem was a slave owner for 43 years in the state of Maryland. It wasn't the land of the free, it was the land of slavery, that had 1.2 million slaves in 1814 when the anthem was written.
try trash: in LA you MUST use the same mafia outfit is you want to demo/permit/time frame. In Canada we call a one ton truck., lots of companies, and load up for the transfer station. Not in Free USA. NO, you can't. !! Surprise!
When we sold our last home in Dallas in 2021 our realtor specifically listed "No HOA" as an amenity. She told us that 65%-70% of her clients ask to see only listings with no HOA's. We had a contract 12 hours after listing our home for full asking price.
How is the HOA charging the poor woman for past fixes when she didn’t even own the home yet?! That’s a nightmare, shouldn’t it go away when the old owner moved out? The hell is wrong with the HOA?
Would be a similar situation to a condominium. Here, when a condo sells, the purchaser's lawyer sees that they get a clean Estoppel Certificate from the condominium corporation saying that there are no outstanding issues or amounts owing on the unit. Otherwise the new owner would inherit all debt secured against the condo unit. Estoppel is a principle under law that prevents someone from arguing/asserting a right that contradicts what they previously said or agreed to by law. So if they commit to a new purchaser that there are no amounts owing from before the purchase, they can't take legal action against the new owner for such a balance owing. (They could still track down the previous owner to try to collect, but the new owner is clear of the matter.) Pays to have a professional obtaining and reviewing documents.
This is a good example that's why you should always hire a lawyer in any real estate deal. The Sellers realtor always says he has your back, but never believe that. If someone does not get paid unless the deal goes through, then they can never be trusted to have your best interest.
The US is an oligarchy and unfortunately, since both of the state approved puppet political parties are owned by the same corporate donors, things won't improve until more ordinary people wake up, see what's going on and demand change. Trying to explain to Europeans how it is in the US, is funny at times but they are also deeply sorry for Americans and the poor quality of life in the US for most ordinary Americans.
I backed down from purchasing a home because when we were about to sign they let us know there was an HOA…. I paid all the fines and walked away. I will die homeless before living in a place with an HOA.
good for you ''I paid all the fines and walked away ' money WELL spent, unlike stupid, careless people who give in to HOA, after they move in they find out how wrong it was, most people agree and regret it...
When I bought my first home I automatically excluded everyone that was in an HOA neighborhood. Why? Because I rented in an HOA neighborhood before. All of the stories people are telling, all true
Back in the day when our parents bought homes and I’m talking about single-family homes, everybody was responsible for keeping their yard together in their house together and people actually had pride in doing so I honestly believe that Home association is nothing more than the middleman charging you fees, that would ultimately buy them separate properties around the world you will never know and the way they did this couple this issupports my thoughts on Home association feel like when I go to Ralph’s there should be several people with petitions to get rid of Home association fees. I would be so happy to sign several of those because I don’t believe Home association should be added on single family dwellings
For condominiums it’s necessary, but for a stand alone home it’s questionable. Especially in a single family home community I would deeply scrutinize an HOA before moving in. Personally, I’ll risk living next to a “House of Davids” where someone is doing weird things.
It’s a way for the town the property is in to not have to maintain the streets, sewer lines, water, etc. I’m in the Midwest, so snow plowing would fall on the town/ municipality, but that isn’t an added cost to the town. The best deal for the town, they still assess your taxes the same as a home without an hoa, without providing those extra services, that should be taken care of by your taxes!
Agreed. I don't understand why the townhouses need HOA. And they are so powerful, like city officials who give a fine for not mowering lawn in their desired way.
@@sunsetparkbayridge11232For townhouses, you share a roof with your neighbors, and siding, so you need someone to be the referee in picking colors, style etc.
@sunsetparkbayridge11232 come to seattle lol. Tons of townhomes don't got HOAs here, you can tell by their street side yards and etc all over grown and just being a jungle lol.
@@bobbybishop5662 I’ll second that. I have 13 acres in a rural area. No HOA! The only thing that my purchase contract said that I couldn’t do on my land was run a feed lot for cattle.
You’ll never catch me dead living in a HOA ever again. We exhausted every legal option to try to get anything done and the next step was taking the law into our own hands. And trust me, I was ready. We opted to move instead because I KNOW no court in this country would have taken my side after I…ahem…crossed certain lines.
State and municipalities are using HOAs as a way to offload costs to homeowners. But these homeowners pay property taxes like anyone else and are entitled to property benefits like anyone else. Also many HOAs are managed by private companies that claim to "represent" the owners. It's a complete ripoff and needs to be abolished ASAP.
Most property taxes on their own cannot cover the costs to maintain the neighborhood, especially for single family homes in the suburbs. This is why the municipalities are offloading the liabilities, they cannot afford it unless property taxes go up.
The taxes they pay do not cover the cost of infrastructure for their homes. Single-family homes require very expensive infrastructure because of how low-density they are. Cities are requiring it because they know property taxes won't come close to covering the cost
This doesn't make sense because their "HOA" taxes could just go to their municipality or county instead. Also calls into question how sustainable the whole "single 'family'" "zoning" thing is. It's large pieces of land being "developed" under this particular "zoning" but much harder to find places for actual majority of families working for average wages in the community. Yet this whole failed "system" keeps going on automatic pilot over the cliff bankrupting most families and society.
Hi, I live in Ontario, California Homeowners Association (HOA). I am dealing with an illegal property lien placed on my home, and a board is unable to produce evidence that the emergency special assessment was valid (ESA). The reason for the ESA was alleged that our new property management company discovered poor bookkeeping by our prior management company, which was to the tune of $200,000.00. Such a discovery should been followed by hiring an independent accountant to conduct an audit, but it wasn't. The new property management's long-time attorney, now our HOA's attorney, said "no audits were conducted, but there is evidence", they produced none. I have delivered certified letters requesting copies of the records that validate the esa to no avail.
Imagine working for an abusive narcissistic boss, then coming home to an abusive narcissistic HOA. You lose so much money and sanity when you live in an HOA community.
I did armed security; mobile patrol 🚓 briefly at a large gated community, HOA-golf club. About 30% were seniors(over 60), maybe 10% of 🏠 were Air B&Bs/2nd homes. The place had a few Karen types, HOA 🦈 who would yip & yap.
An HOA should have no right to place extra fines or place a lien against somebody else's property. They are honestly the worst thing to live under and should be abolished in 99% of communities.
In 2020 in the beginning of COVID I lost my husband and HOA went after my condo, the HOA lawyer was sending me letters with crazy amount of money I had to pay to avoid a foreclosure. So my dearest neighbor she is working in law department, so she look up all documents and finished all foreclosure letters right away by calling to HOA lawyer This story many people still remember, it was a horror time of my life. I did paid all my savings to keep my condo and memory of my dearest husband.
The only way HOAs will go away is if people start refusing to join them or buy property managed by them. The sad truth is that if you sign the contract then you have to deal with the consequences. For us when buying a house we just cut out any option that was in an HOA regardless of what the dues were. I dont care how nice a house is or how good of a deal it is, im never allowing someone else to control what i do with my property. Some states dont even require a disclosure that a home is in an HOA which is insane. You can literally buy a house and never know you owe money until its too late.
Yes but just as Suburban design is a near monopoly on US urban planning, so to is the existence of HOAs in houses people can actually qualify for. There's not so much freedom in signing said contracts. A Sophie's choice isn't really a choice. You can argue the law all you want, but I don't have much respect for laws that uphold systems that are corrupt by design, another example of this: Student loans which would be fraudulent if they weren't run by the government directly.
Because the real state market is embedded in HOA in more than 80% at least in GA. I am pretty sure it is the same experience in other states. In other instances, the realtor and the seller do not disclose the property is part of an HOA otherwise they will lose the customer like in my case. I purchased my house without any information disclosed that the property was part of an HOA until the closing date.
Parent’s old Hoa squandered thousands on useless neighborhood upgrades and mismanagement. Who in their right mind pays $80k for a row of new trees? Moving saved them the headache and about $6k a year in fees. Unregulated Hoas are a disaster waiting to happen
It seems to me HOA is necessary on high rise buildings because of its location and convenience. But for single family houses and communities, that's insane.
They make sense in shared buildings. You wouldn't be the only guy to fix the plumbing in a condo when it goes out, so a single entity that handles all of that makes sense. HOAs on single family homes is just renting.
Only difference between a HOA living and jail is freedom to cook in your own house, provided the smell does not "disturb" the "others" and come-leave at any time.
The fact that there is already an excessive amount of demand awaiting its absorption, despite how everyone is frightened and calling the crash, is another reason why it is less likely to occur that way. 2008 saw no one, at least not the broad public, making this forecast, as I'll explain below. The ownership rate was noted to have peaked in 2004 in the other comment. Having previously peaked in the second quarter of 2020, we are currently at the median level. Between 2008 and 2012, it dropped by 3%, and by the second quarter of 2020, it had dropped from 68 to 65.
Investing in both real estate and stocks can be prudent choices, particularly when backed by a robust trading strategy that can navigate you through prosperous periods.
You're not doing anything wrong; the problem is that you don't have the knowledge needed to succeed in a challenging market. Only highly qualified professionals who had to experience the 2008 financial crisis could hope to earn a high salary in these challenging conditions.
@@TomD226 Recently, I've been considering the possibility of speaking with consultants. I need guidance because I'm an adult, but I'm not sure if their services would be all that helpful.
My consultant is Laurel Dell Sroufe I found her on a CNBC interview where he was featured and reached out to her afterwards. she has since provide entry and exit points on the securities I focus on. You can look her up online if you care supervision. I basically follow her trade pattern and haven't regretted doing so.
There should be some restriction on HOA to prevent out right criminal activity like foreclosing home or asking for huge fees and garnishing wages on those fees.
When I asked my HOA president for some accountability for recent “special assessments,” she threatened to have me shunned by the rest of the community.
This lady really said she believes you sign away your rights. Goodness gracious... I am so blessed that I bought a home with no HOA last yr right before rates went through the roof. My family told me one day someone came by and tried to claim we live in a HOA. Let's just say they are lucky I was not home...
The previous management company: "We don't manage that property anymore, it's the new company's problem. Talk to them." The current management company: "We can't comment on FACTS that took place while the previous company was in charge." And this, right here, is why I will NEVER live in a home with an HOA.
Glad you were able to catch it up. This is how these two management companies have been working together for years under the same strategy. Sentry is not the “new” management company for Belmont Park as many think. Public records from the South of Atlanta demonstrate the business relationship they have since 2017.
Rule 1 of homebuying: Never buy into an HOA neighborhood. Period. Rule 2 of homebuying: If buying into an HOA is unavoidable, have a trusted attorney read the bylaws and covenants to make sure there is no funny business. Rule 3 of homebuying: If you are already in an HOA, keep a trusted attorney on retainer. These HOAs are out of control and it is only a matter of time before you will need said attorney.
Got a notice from the HOA to move my trampoline in my backyard to be "directly behind my house". Problem is I have a cul-de-sac lot with over half my backyard not "directly behind my house". I guess I can't use half my backyard as I see fit according to the HOA. Anyway, I spent two hours submitting a deviation request with pictures, marked up plot map, etc.. of why I thought it was already placed in a reasonable spot. They denied it with no explanation other than restating the bylaw that it must be "directly behind the house". Thanks for the thoughtful consideration! I would've left it there except my wife didn't want to lose pool privileges. BTW, if you ever need to move a trampoline you can put your kid's scooter under one side and lift the other and move it as a one person job lol! My wife was shocked when she came home and I had moved it.
That's just crazy....there's got to be a way to challenge that, a trampoline in the backyard (but visible to the street) is not destroying the neighborhood's aesthetic....HOA tyranny at its finest....
The HOA letter I got said it was 'noted during a periodic inspection' and they 'felt compelled' to notify us but understood that we 'might not know this was a rule'. Doesn't discount that it might have been a neighbor complaint but I lean that it was the HOA doing annoying HOA things. Meanwhile all the back yards that have roads right next to them - well there are several old trampolines that can seen by many more eyes from the side of their yard. I guess they are good though. Technicalities and such. Oh well, life isn't fair.
And that is EXACTLY why I despise HOAs! You are the homeowner and SHOULD have the right to do with your property as you want as long as your home and property meets county code. It is ridiculous you can’t put your trampoline where you want.
Even if an HOA does generate homeowner value, if you have to pay several hundred dollars a month into perpetuity, that's often an insurmountable hurdle rate. Its like interest payments that never end and keep going higher. More laws (or prosecution) are definitely needed to protect homeowners
The last 2 homes I've had have had HOAs. The first home we paid $1,200 per year for no amenities other than minimal landscaping, trash/recycling, and a general maintenance fund. We were told by the management company we never had any $ in our accounts. I'm convinced that workers at the management company were skimming a ton of $. The home I live in now we pay about ~$1,000 per year but that gets us trash and recycling service, a nice pool in the summer, workout room, several playgrounds, several neighborhood events each year (fall festival, summer crab boil, spring fling, etc..), and they do a great job of taking care of the landscaping. In general it feels like money well spent.
@@karmendimas5274 No kidding Sherlock.. Does you house include a gated community.. olympic size pool or tennis court? HOAs are terrible but a well organized residential zone can benefit from collective cooperation.
MOVE ALONG KAREN! GO KAREN SOME PLACE ELSE, YOUR PART OF THE PROBLEM AS TO WHY THE INDIVIDUAL IS LOSING THERE RIGHTS ! MOVE ON KAREN! MOVE ON! @@absolutium
The extreme irony about this is HOAs stiffen and in some rare cases LOWER home values when you look at real data. Even common sense will say if house A and house B are identical and in the same area but only house A has a HOA why would someone willing buy into that?
This stands true in my area in Central Florida. Same exact house built by a local custom/spec builder. Mine is in the HOA area 0.3 acre lot. Same exact house on 0.3 acre lot no HOA is worth 100k more. You literally have to buy freedom here now. If you experience constant undue harassment from your HOA, hire a real estate attorney :). They hate HOAs just as much as you!
One of the opening statements made in this piece is that HOAs were formed so that municipalities were no longer responsible (liable) for the care and maintenance of certain neighbourhoods but government are the ones that dictate property value. HOA seems like the legalised Mob tactics of the early days of insurance companies, where you have to use them in order to function and live and then the law intervenes to enforce their rules of operation. If people don't band together now to get rid of them this will just be the standard of life, just like the insurance world. Everything is done now in this world to navigate from liability and this is how your city doesn't want to deal with you as a homeowner, by allowing HOA's.
More than 80% of newly-built single-family homes sold in 2019/2022 belonged to an HOA. during the 2004 housing boom-home prices were significantly inflated, leaving people unable to sell later because they owed more on the house than it was worth. I know several people who bought during that time, thinking it was a good investment, but it wasn’t until the COVID housing boom that prices finally returned to those original levels.
To balance out your real estate holdings, I suggest investing in equities. If you're cautious, even the worst recessions can present fantastic buying opportunities. Additionally, volatility can produce fantastic short-term purchase and sell opportunities. This is not financial advise, but you should buy immediately away because money isn't king right now!
You're right. I was able to diversify my 450K portfolio across markets with the aid of an investment coach, and I was able to use high dividend yield stocks, ETFs, and bonds to generate a little over $830K in net profit.
Would you mind providing details on the advisor who helped you? saving for a pension through a corporate program since the age of 18. I hit greater tax along the road, so I increased my company pension with a SIPP (tax benefits). I'm now 50 and would love to expand my finances more aggressively; there are a few automobiles I still want to drive and a few mega-vacations that I still want to take.
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with Melissa Terri Swayne for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
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I have told this many times. I had an HOA advise me that they had voted my property into their HOA and that I had 30 days to come into compliance. I sent a response that I was not part of their HOA. 30 days later I started receiving violation notices in my mailbox. I sent a cease and desist letter. A month later, I received a notice of intent to seize my property if I was not in compliance in 10 days. Two weeks later I received notice of a scheduled hearing. At the courthouse, the attorney for the HOA recognized me and asked if I represented the homeowner, and I told him that I was the homeowner. I told him that I was not part of the HOA and they had been advised of that in writing several times. In court, the HOA president told how I had ignored all notices and refused to pay fines. When it was my turn, I asked her how long the property had been a part of the HOA, she gave the date they had voted my property in. I asked her if she had membership documents signed by me. She said "No, you refused so we voted you in" The judge, and their attorney both said HUH ? ? ? I then asked her about putting violation notices in my mailbox and she said that was the only way since I refused to install a notice box at my garage door. I asked her if she realized that putting main in a US mailbox was a federal crime. She said "not in a HOA" I saw their attorney shake his head. The judge asked her how she thought that the HOA could vote someone in without their consent, she said the annexed the property according to their by-laws. I asked the judge for a judgment as a matter of law, and consideration of my counter-claim. The judge said "granted to both, state your counter-claim" I outlined my compensatory damages, and then asked for putative damages in the amount of $5000 per violation notice, and an additional $10,000 for the frivolous case. The judge granted $350,000 in putative damages, and just over $50,000 in actual damages for time, and earnings lost responding and researching their claims. HOA woman said that the HOA could not pay the judgement. I told the judge that I would accept the vacant 20 Acres of association property adjoining my property with the release of HOA claims. The HOA voted the next week to release the property and remove Caren (Yes her name is Caren) as HOA president. I found out that she wanted my property as access to the additional acres the HOA had purchased to build additional homes to sell. Subsequently, the members of the HOA voted to dissolve the HOA as without the additional anticipated acreage income, they could not continue to fulfill the HOA obligations. The entire neighborhood (save a few) is much happier with the HOA gone.
CONGRATS!!!✊🏿💯
Cnbc should do a feature story about your story!
That was the most satisfying TH-cam comment I’ve ever read. Congratulations on your victory against the HOA and wish me luck on mine 😂
Big W, hell yeah bro 🤙
I love this story.
There should definitely be more laws regulating HOAs.
The only law regarding HOAs should be the law that outlaws them. They are contrary to freedom.
@@SirEricArthurBlair I see them as a necessary evil in places like condos, but detatched family homes, definitely not
@@jer1776this is the correct take
Lobby your state legislature. The federal government will not intervene.
I can sort of agree with this - but you are also making a choice to live in one. I know many cities (Phoenix, LV, Cali) it's DIFFICULT to not be in one, but it can be done.
Unfortunately, not everyone has the option of not having an HOA. I currently live in Hawaii, and to the best of my knowledge, all townhouses and condominiums have an HOA, and at the moment, that is all that I can afford. When I first moved in, the fees were reasonable. But now, it has gotten out of control. What I pay in monthly maintenance fee, would pay for a two bedroom apartment or even a mortgage on the mainland. To make matters worse, we do not have any kind of amenities that would justify the fees we pay. No swimming pool, rec center, or even a park for goodness sake. What really takes the cake is that we have elderly people who are on a fixed income, and this is not even taken into consideration. I now totally understand why we have so many homeless people here who actually do have a job. It's totally crazy.
I hear you. I lived in Maui, it was crazy.
Developers and CAI work heavily for these particular areas
inquiry the HOA what´s going on with the fees, go to the meetings. Group up with your neighbours to vote out the HOA board. This monday we have a meeting and is election year to vote for the HOA president and 3 counselors( election every 2 years), we are hopping to vote him out. wish me luck.
@sensato957 Good luck 🙏
the 80s daecades only otion is have an hoa
So many real estate listings make it a point to say "NO HOA" when applicable. Obviously "NO HOA" is a selling point.
Unfortunately, there can STILL be HOA covenants on a "no HOA" property, as long as there's no HOA fees.
I tried my hardest to find a lot w/o an HOA and the best I could do was one w/ a few basic covenants of varying annoyance.
NO HOA means nothing. I looked @ buying an apt in DC. It was about $300k. That price left me extra money to redo the kitchen. Then I read about how the elevator needed to be replaced in the bldg. Obviously it was an older bldg bc it's east coast city living. Basically, everyone in the bldg was going to have to pay $10,000 a piece to replace and install a new elevator. Homeownership isn't for everybody.
That is why, as mentioned in the story, non-HOA properties increase in value faster than HOA properties. An HOA property may cost more when built/first sold, but gains value more slowly due to less appeal to future buyers.
@@chiplangowski3298largely cause people want to make their house, into their home. Not into a corporate white washed investment
@@CC-si3crthat's extremely ironic
How is HOA not tanking home values? Who in their right mind would want to pay money for some Karen to tell them how to live? Sounds like a living hell to me.
Other Karen's and people who work for the HOA.
Because some people dont want a homeless shelter built next to their home or low income housing so their cars are broken into every night
(american) white people. Otherwise the neighborhood would look something like in Mexico but with good roads. Not bad I'd say but hey
I had the same mindset before I started owning properties. you will get there lol...
I have always lived in homes with no HOA. Never been a problem with those said issues. Most cities have ordinance enforcement that will take care of major issues like unkept homes or abandoned cars. People who support HOAs are just fear mongers.
My father in law got on the HOA board when they moved to AZ. When my husband and I visited them we took a walk. My husbands mother made a big deal because some man had his garage door open. I asked her what the big deal was. She said , well, burglary. I said that's his problem. What she really meant is that everyone was supposed to have the doors closed. For a uniform appearance. I think board members are people that need their little bit of power. I'd NEVER live with a HOA
What is really means is that your in-laws like the power and control that come with being on the HOA board.
We live in an HOA and are quite happy here. Your anecdote does not characterize all HOAs, any more than one swallow makes a summer. If somebody wants to live as they please (which, of course is impossible) they should live in the mountains and eat grass.
@@mencken8Found the HOA Karen lol
"uniform appearance" THAT is what I find ugly about so many of these places.
I say shut your garage door…nobody wants to see a known ghetto nosy body door breather across from them…that’s been a long going ghetto associated human function .
The issue is that either the renter or the owner must in some way pay insurance and property taxes if they want a "permanent roof" with utilities like electricity, gas and water. Because of this, many people-at least in California, where I currently reside-are living in tents. No taxes, rent, mortgages, or insurance. The number of people who tell me they live in their car that I meet amazes me. Its crazy out here!
I get such worries too. I'm 50 and retiring early. Already worried of the future and where its headed, especially in terms of financies and how to get by. I'm also considering making my first investment in the stock market, but how can I do so given that the market has been in a mess for the majority of the year?
Since the outbreak of 2020, which significantly affected the market, I've been consulting an investment coach before making any investment decisions because their entire philosophy is built around employing a high-profit orientated plan while simultaneously trading long and short, as well as decreasing risk exposure as a hedge against inevitable downtrends. When coupled with their access to odd data and analysis, underperformance is virtually impossible.
I won't pretend to know everything, though. Her name is Melissa Rose Francks but I won't say anything more. Most likely, you can find her basic information online; you are welcome to do further study.
Thanks a lot for this recommendation. I just looked her website up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
Live in car is much easier if you have a big car. The only problem then is where to shower + brush. I tried, it's doable except for the shower part. Buy a gym membership would take care of shower
I had no idea that HOA’s had the power to garnish your wages or foreclose on your home over petty fees. That’s horrible.
Hell, they were doing that during COVID when landlords and banks were forbidden from doing so. HOAs had no such exemptions from foreclosing.
They have to get a judgment then a court order to be able to either garnish wages or place a lien on your home. Its not just the flick of a pen. The couple claiming they knew nothing are hiding their ignorance and failure to respond to a long stream of notices from the HOA.
@@HighCrimesMisdemeanors maybe, maybe not. Regardless, their entire neighborhood was underwater. That was likely a very corrupt HOA. Nice try blaming the victim tho. 👌
HOAs are evil 👿
And lie, cheat and pocket HIA dues not cashing checks which were delivered like 38 years. That sends paying homeowners into foreclosure. It almost happened to me. In addition lost a home sale due to repairs not being done to decks, which are due was raised for for 3 years.
"No HOA" is a huge selling point for real estate listings. We specifically bought our house because it was NOT in an HOA. Our neighborhood is cool because every house is different and most owners take pride in maintaining the neighborhood. We don't want to pay $200 monthly to a faceless company to manage our landscaping. We'll look after it ourselves, thank you.
hell yeah but I think the problem starts with the developer because when they build a subdivision I think they're the ones that decide, initially that is, if that development is going to have a HOA or not and it wouldn't surprise me if the builders and developers are in bed with the HOA companies so it becomes not about doing what makes sense but what makes more money and getting hundreds a month out of people's homes for as long as it's standing so that's a massive incentive to encourage the requirement to start a HOA in new development it's a scam
But one can easily form in your neighborhood
@@itsrobloxhereYeah, and you don’t have to join a new HOA if you already live that neighborhood.
@@sunshineimperials1600 i believe you are required to join if one forms in an existing non-hoa neighborhood, not sure tho
@@itsrobloxhere I think in all cases your current property will not be required to join a HOA.
Our HOA just sent us a notice about a car parked illegally on the road, and said we would need to rectify this violation within 10 days. -- We responded by informing them there is no such car at our residence and that they should at least know who's house is who's and that we expect them to rectify this mistake within 10 days.
What was their response?
@@michaellim4165 ask again in 6 days
What was their response bch?
They're going to simply hit you with another fine. HOAs are money pits.
Wow the same exact thing happened to me a few months ago! They sent a notice that I owed a fine and a picture of a car parked along the street but that car wasn’t even near my house! I’ve never seen the car before. I told them to remove the fine or send better proof, they removed it
The federal government needs to step in and HEAVILY regulate the existence of HOAs limiting their abilities such as handing out fines and placing liens on people’s homes.
If the government steps in they'll be on their side and make it worse.
...and foreclosing on property? Preposterous!
That’s all explained in the contract BEFORE you sign. No one is making you do it.
@@arios1977 sometimes it's not even in the contract. They just show to by surprise and you'll have to fight that off.
They should be outlawed, as they are in most civilised nations.
I lived in An HOA years back and i can tell you I hated it so much. The lady was right it’s like signing over your rights. You’re essentially letting people who did not contribute into buying your house have full power over what you with your own property. From what color your house is to what sign you have in your yard or windows or where your trash can is sitting it’s crazy.
There's a good reason you're not there anymore. They don't want people like you.
The Land Of The Free. or is it?
@@skataskatata9236HOA is the problem not the country. I got no HOA and live just fine
@@DanielRivera-q6eit’s is a problem with the country. The law caters to these bully control freaks, not many places in this world would they enable petty low lives to abuse power in a HOA like this
Well said
Odd how they never stated the fact that HOAs were initially set up to manage watershed issues and nothing else. Either limit HOA authority or eliminate them.
Like most things in America, they were born out of racism. They were created to ensure that no non-white people lived in a neighbourhood.
HOAs were originally set up to keep neighborhoods racially segregated. But they try to keep that hush hush, because then more people might question the historical value of such an institution.
Watershed?
@@CC-si3cr you'll learn about it when you get into high school
Somebody lied to you.
I'd rather pay an extra $500 a month on my mortgage payment to NOT BE part of an HOA than deal with HOA BS
From everything I have heard so far. Not just this video.
That should be a lot cheaper on average. So not really a sacrifice.
Amen!
Who pays people to dictate how they prefer to live … I feel bad for idiots who put themselves in the crosshairs
thing is depending where you live its difficult to find homes that are not part of an HOA.
"You will own NOTHING and be happy (or else)"!!!
My wife and I purchased our house in 2001.
We refused to consider one that had a HOA!
HOA is like living in an apartment, someone telling you what you can and can't do with your house!
And you basically pay them to harass you.
Worse than apartment at least you're leasing. You can lose 100s of thousands
HOA: the solution for people who want the equity that comes with ownership without the authority and self determination that should come with it…
🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
Never HOA!😮
@@Tinkery You summed that up perfectly!
I bought a beautiful first floor condo in 2013 as my first home. Lots of really cool older folks lived there. Even older residents sat on the board and kept re-electing themselves regardless of what the bylaws said. I’m a USMC vet and the rules said I could fly a flag. I chose a Marine Corps flag and was promptly sent a photo of my balcony with said flag and a warning to remove my flag as it offended other residents. My neighbors above and next to me asked why I took it down and I showed them. They insisted that I fly it again and started paying my fines for me while raising hell with the board. Long story short they rallied the other residents up and got me elected as Vice President of the board which in turn gave me more leverage to get a couple other younger residents on it. We removed them, found out they stole a bunch of money, the courts seized their units and we changed a bunch of rules and made it a fun place to live.
Awesome!!!!!!! 🎉
good for you, but what a massive hassle to deal with it
Excellent!
Thats awesome
Turn this into a movie, ty
As soon as I find out a home is part of an HOA, I immediately lose interest in the property. Why would I to live in a community that tells me what color I am allowed to paint my house or what kind of pets I can own? It's ridiculous. Imagine spending half a million dollars for less freedoms than you have when renting.
don't forget yearly inspections and people going into your backyard uninvited. It's like do you even own your house anymore? sheesh
And also why would you want to live in a neighborhood where your neighbors are the types of self-important busybodies who want an HOA.
Good point.
Sucks, but also some cities/counties have limits on pets. :(
I’m apparently at my max of two dogs and a cat
You would be a trash neighbor I bet.
Many HOA board members "secretly" own the vendors that they use... lawn work, irrigation, concrete, pesticides, property managers, etc. There needs to be a law allowing residents to see the actual bids from vendors and a law that vendor affiliations need to be disclosed by board members and property management companies! It is the residents' money paying these vendors, but the bids are hidden from them... not fair!!!
they need a part 2
there is a law, it civil court, you have to take them to court to force them to divulge their associations, it costs money and they can retaliate.
HOA is a deal with the devel
Accurate!
That was the #1 thing when we bought our home, NO HOA!!
It's Our home, not the communities
My buddy works for a top 5 builder by volume in Michigan, owners are lawyers, they also own the company they sell the houses to if they haven’t sold in a year to rent them and not sink the value of surrounding homes. Regardless, they always maintain at least two residences in every neighborhood because they also run the HOA, two votes gives them automatic power to veto anything trying to be changed so they retain complete control of all aspects of the neighborhood. It’s disgusting
My wife and I recently bought our first home and the one thing we both agreed on was no matter how perfect the house may be if it is in an HOA we pass. Fortunately, where we live there are plenty of older neighborhoods without any of that BS. Everyone around us takes care of their home out of pride of ownership not because someone will fine you if your grass is too long.
Based on our previous home we told the real estate agent "NO HOAs!!!" It worked out great. Sure, my neighbors have big RVs and trucks, but that didn't stop our house prices from doubling.
Those neighbors with big RVs and trucks, and CHICKENS, will be a Godsend for your family in the next Great Depression or WWIII. It can mean survival or not. The trucks can bring water or set up a defense perimeter. I love the freedom of my neighbors, and I keep my eyes on my own property, not on what they might or might not have. I literally don't care if somebody has THEIR OWN CAR up on blocks. We NEED mechanics in an emergency.
@@davidb2206 One day a bear went across our back yard, went to the neighbors, climbed a tree and dropped into their fenced chicken area. You should have heard the squawking.
Funny people are against trucks. I own a 2023 Ram 2500. It cost more then 90% of luxury cars out there that people like to show off. Cost more then a Tesla.
Can you say again so it makes sense ?
@@davidb2206😂😂😂😂
We are basically giving control of our homes over to a corporate board staffed by Karens.
How are the American people allowing this? We’ve definitely gone soft.
Look what happened to the 2020 election. Is it really a surprise people are this lazy and stupid? There was a time these people would be tarred and feathered for these kinds of actions.
It's the nature of neoliberalism and olicharcy. The US is an oligarchy, with both of the state approved political parties owned by the same corporate donors.
Problem is many houses in the nice areas are already under HOAs. You either buy into them or kick rocks.
The city administration allowed the HOA so the city doesn't have to maintain roads, sidewalks, drains, cleaning etc. and still collect the property tax
Ban HOA
An HOA with a bad reputation can not only devalue your home, it can make it almost impossible to sell. Speaking from experience. There is a beautiful neighborhood near me that I used to own a house in. It takes about twice as long to sell a house there and they sell for less than in neighboring areas that do not have HOAs.
The arriving family is expected to pay the balance and late fees of the previous tenants, or at least when the house was sitting vacant? They weren't even THERE yet, how is that their fault?
The residents tried to get in contact with the HOA for 6 YEARS and still hadn't gotten a response; when it goes to court and the HOA's lawyers hash out a payment plan, the HOA is ignorant of that plan. Why should the couple continue to pay monthly dues and fines to an HOA that doesn't even acknowledge their existence and actions?
These people should have moved out the same day they moved in. Now, they may not even be able to find a buyer who would be saddled with the remaining balance that THEY would be leaving behind.
I was in a HOA community once. Never again. For a community that can tells me what I can and cannot do to my house they need to be paying my mortgage and taxes. Never never never buy into a hoa community.
Harder and harder to find non HOA nowadays
I live in an Hoa community. For 12 years and I like not looking at cars jacked up and being worked on in driveways, I like not looking at a school bus parked in someone's driveway. I like the fact that my nextdoor neighbor can't paint their house purple or pink. I like that my neighbors also can't let their lawn grow 4 feet tall. If you like the things I mentioned then your right an HOA is not for you.
@@PAIDFOR50don't live in the getto.....aaaand communisim never works
If you don't want to live in an HOA you don't have to. It's as simple as that.
Unfortunately they're baked in to every neighborhood now.
I learned pretty quick to NEVER, under ANY circumstances whatsoever buy property in one of these unconstitutional traps. I own my own property and as long as I'm not doing anything expressly illegal NO ONE has any right to tell me what to do or how to paint my door or anything of the sort.
Sounds like a militia compound you live on
Actually, they do if THEY create the by-laws, and YOU read them and buy there anyway. In doing so, you're accepting those conditions. Saying "they have no right" is an emotional response, not a legal or logical argument.
@@MrDCMiami cool bro. Then I'll build a giant pumpkin launching trebuchet and proceed to pumpkin pie every member. I guess you can't read? Literally says I'm aware of the trap and would never be stupid enough to buy property in one
@@kylewilliams9907 I know what you said in your opening sentence. But it is YOU who can't (or refuse to) read:
"NO ONE has any right to tell me what to do or how to paint my door or anything of the sort."
They most certainly do, if you consent to living there!! Do you know the meaning of the word "IF?"
@@GNMi79 Another dummy outs himself. They have that right for whoever chooses to buy/live there, and that's why he chose not to live in an HOA managed community. He contradicted himself.
I just moved to a neighborhood without an HOA - first time I've never lived under an HOA....it's bliss. States and counties love HOAs because it takes the burden of maintenance off of them - nothing will change until people start lobbying their local representatives.
It won’t matter. None of us can afford to bribe politicians like corporations do.
Its bliss until your next door neighbor decides to paint his house Purple and Green while storing 6 inoperable cars in the drive way. Wow sounds like bliss.
@@joeshmooo5327 I honestly would not care. Limiting what someone does on their property is stupid. Unless they are making crack let them live their lives happily
@joeshmooo5327 It's called freedom and the only people with that many cars own a big lot. HOA is just another form of segregation cuz you're paying extra not to have lower class living amongst them.
I live in non-HOA and it's not like that. Plus there's laws about inoperable vehicles and uncared for homes, HOA is technically useless.
@Daveyjonesvi of course! But what do you do when your neighbors let their house become pigstys?
Homeowner: "I just paid off my house, yeahhh
HOA: *"Not so fast."*
I hate real estate
Your Property Taxes Every Year.
I only looked at non-HOA homes when shopping and got a great one! When I hear the horror stories several friends are having with their HOAs, I realize that buying a non-HOA home was the best decision I've ever made.
My wife and I looked into a place with an HOA and when I asked about the rules they said it was really relaxed and they seemed shocked when I asked them for the rule book so I could read it. It turns out they you had to get approval if you wanted blinds that weren’t white, changing your oil in you driveway was considered major maintenance and not allowed, and they allowed you to have a boat in the back yard but only if it was behind a fence yet fences were only allowed to have a single wide man gate. I will personally never live in an HOA.
I have lived in four homes with HOAs, all of them a pain. One of them had a woman on the board who helped herself to walk onto our properties, all the way to the backyards, to poke around and look for issues. And she lived across the street from us. What a nightmare! I called her our neighborhood Nazi.
If you are looking to buy home, the first thing you should check is whether or not there is a HOA. If there is, don't buy!
Is that not trespassing?
@@TheGreatWasian_ Did not seem to stop her. She was a 5-foot chain-smoking nurse (so she said), like something out of a Tim Burton movie.
Most of the homes not in an HOA have terrible schools or are in the ghetto. So unfortunately unless you're open to moving to another city or state, you're stuck either renting or paying an HOA. Here in Florida, we're lucky if they don't have a CDD fee. Finding a home not in a HOA and in a good neighborhood means you're going to overpay for an old house or move somewhere in the middle of no where.
@@Shorty15c4007yeah, or, how about this, have proper municipal bylaws in place that prevent people from their homes become a dump. This HOA/Ghetto thing seems like a uniquely American issue
@@woodrmp1 It would be nice if voting worked, but whats the point if money talks and lobbyists can bribe the person voted into office? Everyone is corruptible in this system and the working class doesn't really have a say in the matter.
Seems like you're either lucky enough to snag something during the pandemic, or you're stuck in the aftermath with homes being sold for 3x what they were worth in 2019.
fear a housing crash due to people buying homes above asking prices with little equity. If prices drop, affordability and potential foreclosures may arise, worsened by future layoffs and rising living costs. I want to invest more than $300k, but I'm not sure on how to mitigate risk.
Consider reallocating from real estate to other reliable investments like stock, crypto or precious metals . Severe recessions offer market buying opportunities with caution, as volatility can yield short-term trading prospects. Not financial advice, but it may be wise to invest, as cash isn't ideal in this period.
It's often true that people underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to around $750k.
nice! once you hit a big milestone, the next comes easier.. who is your advisor please, if you don't mind me asking?
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Melissa Terri Swayne” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her a outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her.
I've been house hunting and I've noticed some sellers are getting sneaky about the neighborhood being in an HOA. If it says something like "covenants are in place to protect your investment" it just means HOA, or POA. I was charmed by one adorable place, until they said no dogs were allowed, not even as visitors. I don't even have a dog, but that just felt wrong. They insisted it wasn't an HOA, except for the fee for maintenance of communal spaces, and the list of rules. So even HOAs know they're not desirable to a lot of people.
Very true
They even say no pickup trucks allowed and I’m never parting with my truck.
@@abdullahal-shimri3091 who would want to live around people who judge you for your vehicle choice? They're just snobs
And deceptions work into the paperwork completely..
NEVER buying a home with an HOA. Unless you're paying my bills, you do not get to charge ME & tell me what I can & cannot have.
You pay taxes and you can't really tell what politicians should do either, nor do they care. lol. We all live under some form of rules.
Whiny Boy...Stop crying You signed that contract....not me and YOU Agreed to let someone tell you what to do...and if You didn't YOU have Nothing To Cry About...YOU just like to stick YOUR Nose in other peoples business and lives....
It is actually very simple ...Don't like it don't sign ...If you did sign...Stop whining !
@@Steven-xf8mz Taxes fix the roads, clear snow, open libraries, give unemployment insurance, food banks, community centers, public school, homeless shelters, money to raise kids, and some healthcare. And HOA does...?
@@seekittycat You don't know what HOA do, and you have the audacity to comment? LMAO! Do you think HOA is some sort of imaginary company that shows up and take your money and ran away? HOA is ran by the community at large, the money collected are tracked and spend, and retained balance are stored in a saving account as reserve for the community at large. Depending on the setup of your HOA; some of the things HOA could be paying are master insurance that covers earthquake, flood, and fire, road repair as it's privately owned by the community, water bill if water are not divided, common area such as gym, pool, club room, etc, building repair, organizing community events, coordinate with fire dept to make sure building and safety are up to code, deal with your bad neighbors, general cleaning, gardening, etc.....
I would encourage you to understand what HOA do before you establishing a negative view toward it. If you still have the same perception after some research, then that's when I say people are entitled to different views.
If you don't live in a HOA currently or have lived in one before. I would recommend you to reach out and find an annual financial statement, it would layout what the expenses are in general. The HOA often don't retain much after expenses, you may disagree with some of the expenses, and that's totally fair. The company that performs the daily tasks are often paid at fixed cost annually + administrative cost, the HOA boards don't make money as they're all voluntary. If you would like to know more in depth, you could run for a board. All I'm saying is I would encourage you to understand before forming a negative perception of something...
@@Steven-xf8mzI mean yes but did you watch the video. Ofc not all but many people have issues with hoas. Even the stats at the end represented most people do not wan to live with a hoa
When I was looking for my first home, a house with an HOA was always a dealbreaker for me, didn’t care how nice the home was. Very glad I stuck with that. It’s insane how much power these HOAs have.
Same!
@@mariahsmom9457same here
Stick to your morals!
HOA is the worse. I just sold my home 6 months ago and moved into a traditional clean neighborhood with no HOA. Although I was fully aware of the HOA when I first bought my previous home, the rates just went up insanely. I started at $80/month and within 3yrs I was paying $300/month. Their justification was always landscaping cost for which we didn't even have grass. We had a bunch of cheap bushes. We had 1 pool and a very small playground for the kids. No gym, no cleaning crews on-site. In fact the HOA was sold to different agencies and in the end the agency was "managing" us from a city that was over 50miles away. They rarely answered calls or emails. When we sold our home they charged us 3k to transfer the HOA to the new owners. It was the a horrible experience considering how expensive they are and how much control they have over your home.
Bet they are profiting from the fees.
Definitely one of my requirements when purchasing my first home was NOT being on an HOA
Me as well. No regrets.
I just moved to get out of a nightmare of a HOA
Yup.
I bought my home in 2019 in a neighborhood that was built in the mid 70's and no silly HOA however I heard from my neighbor that some people were going around the neighborhood taking votes to bring HOA and he told nearly all the people voted for NO HOA 😊👍🏿
Question: Can a house with no HOA at time of purchase get sucked into a new HOA they voted against? Or are they grandfathered in?
@sarysa I would pray and hope that they would be grandfathered in and NOT have to be part of the HOA. However, I'm pretty 100% damn sure that the newly established HOA would give the homeowners of that grandfathered home an extremely hard time and would be a pain in the ass about it. And then you'd have the other homeowners/neighbors in that community complaining about why they are required to be HOA members but not the grandfathered home.
@sarysa No. There have been times where an HOA has popped up and tried fining people that aren't part of the HOA and it's always ended up in court with the HOA normally getting disbanded.
How trump stold back what he sold .hoa director fees fines and lawyers..? Management..
Wow had no idea there's people out here fishing for that.
My sister owns a condo in Fontana California, ( San Bernardino County) every year they raise the fees the max allowed. The fee is now $800/ month. People are having a hard time selling these homes. It's an absolute racket! I would like for you guys to interview the communities that have been scammed by the hoa managers. Some of these people get away with stealing MILLIONS.
Omg
Just dont pay them tf
If she’s paying $800 a month then she’s probably rich, so it’s harder to feel bad.
That’s more than most people’s mortgages.
@@CTU-JackBauerhow does that make any sense at all?
you know people in comunity can vote them out right? seem like the community is ok with the Hoa manager
I would never buy a house in an HOA, but if I were to give them an offer, it'd be at least $50k less than asking price. HOAs can burn in hell. Someone is going to tell me "whoa, hey man, not all HOAs are bad". That may be true, but just the thought that they have the power to govern your life and treat you like a child and harass you is enough for me to never even consider an HOA home. This sword of Damocles ever present above your head, it's beyond me how anybody would want to live like that. It's as if you don't even own your home. Work your @ss off to buy a home, and then some Karen gets to decide what you can or can't do with your home.
HOA here in Colorado has gotten so bad that laws are being enacted to limit their power. It's gotten so bad that it was obvious that their goal was to force the homeowners into foreclosure then publish the auction in small rural newspapers that nobody reads so that only "their selected" bidders would show up. These HOS have become brutal and they are not there to protect you.
🎯
That is so crooked.
@@paulgermano7837any system where someone gains the power to fine you with no checks and balances, is crooked.
This is part of why im so scared to buy a home here. I have a family, and i want to make a lovely home without restriction on what color i can paint my house, or what type of naturalist lawn i want to put in instead of grasses that shouldnt grow here. Im afraid to put myself into a half a million dollar home, struggle to pay the mortgage and pmi, only to have an HOA swoop in develop, apply liens, and steal my home from under me. Nightmare inducing, when all i want is to put my family in a house and live peacefully
And sooner or later at yours..
Live in a rural area and we do not have an hoa. This past year we had someone that came up and asked if we would like to start a hoa within our community. They ended up having the cops called on them and were arrested for stolen mail in their vehicle.
Another bonus of hoas..
People obsessed with property values are the type of people you don't want in charge of an HOA
Exactly nailed it
100%
Actually, if they're interested in property values, I don't have a problem with them. What's criminal, is when they're interested in forcing some owners out, nit-picking about aesthetics--like mailbox color, landscape plant choices, solar panels, flags, and decor, and trying to foreclose on homes. When they're interested in FINEING owners, rather than helping the homes keep their value, that's a problem. When they're interested in making profits, that harms property values.
@cariwaldick4898 that's every HOA and that's why HOA sucks period
@@DanielRivera-q6e I'm not disagreeing with you, but HOA's could have a use. What needs to change, is their complete lack of oversight, regulation, transparency, and grievance resolution. They should NEVER be allowed to take someone's house. They should rein in their profitability. If we're required to be in them to buy a new home, they should have some SERIOUS limitations on what they can and can't do.
That guy said it best in the beginning: HOAs are usually liked by people that like to have a cookie cutter experience and want to feel important and included. I would rather rent for the rest of my life than buy a home and have zero control over what colour I can paint my house or how to care for my lawn or garage.
Never join or move into an area with an HOA.
If your neighborhood decides to form one opt out of joining. Never agree or sign anything from the HOA.
It doesn't matter how nice the house looks or seems to be. Most HOA's will end up costing you more.
You shouldn't have to take the HOA to court to have things done right by you.
My HOA experience: When I left the garbage can out over 24 hours because I was gone traveling, the HOA stole it. At first I had no idea where it was until I mentioned it to a neighbor; when I called the HOA to ask if they knew where it was and they told me they took it. Put it in their maintenance shed a mile away. Told me they would not return it and I had to find a neighbor with a vehicle big enough to get it back since mine wasn’t. Rules and regs only said they would fine for that not steal the can. Also, I got written up for having a garden hose in the front yard when they did their yearly inspection (they don’t say what date it will be) so I had to put the hose away and call back for a reinspection or they would start fining me. And I had a talking to from the block captain after my boyfriend changed the oil in his car in the driveway, once. My current home has no HOA so none of this BS drama.
yearly inspection? that sounds like absolute misery. Its a hell no for me dawg.
Yeah, they are just losers
I can't imagine what kind of a person it takes to seriously assume a role of a, hehe, block captain.
Yeah HOAs are just a bunch of busybodies with no life who want to power trip on their neighbors. They're usually the least qualified to run the neighborhood because anyone halfway competent would have better things to do. That also means these people are usually too dumb to understand concepts of fiduciary duties and instead think they can do whatever they want.
Sounds like a bunch of people that take comfort in the misery of others since they have absolutely nothing better to do
Its amazing how much personal freedom American's are willing to give up now a days to feel safe and comfortable. You can't let others tell you what you can do with your personal property. I am sad at the loss of the real America.
That's the trick.
Yes its sad how Democrat cities abuse the 2nd amendment but people get what they vote for
America ?? How dare you call this America
A lot of the times you don't have a choice but to move into an HOA. HOAs increase the value of homes not in an HOA as folks will pay a premium to not have to deal with them.
I think ppl are more concerned with what their neighbors are doing with their property. Like renting them out to ppl who don’t take care of the property. Or investors leaving homes abandoned and being unreachable when squatters move in
HOA is another government below the local government. And, the HOA fee can be considered another tax burden to the home owner.
Bet they profit from the fees. No one would be in business if they didn't/
It's obvious that the HOA is trying to get those people to move out.
That was there original purpose to restrict the movement of black people
@@wendelleddiebrewerlllnew goals, new century 👉 middle class or below
@@wendelleddiebrewerlll LOL. Race card.... PLAYED.
then they want the whole community to move , HOA IS A SCAM
Please upload proof of your point @@wendelleddiebrewerlll
I could never live in a HOA. Many people I know live in HOA housing and usually don’t have any problems, but it’s the lack of control over your own home is the issue. One of my coworkers wanted a privacy fence, turns out she can’t. The other fell in love with a certain color shingles for her roof, turns out the HOA wouldn’t allow that color. It’s little things that can add up, and while your current HOA is fine and dandy, things can always take a dramatic turn for the worst. I would and will always vote against HOAs. I love that I can do what ever the hell I want to do to my home.
Also HOA fee is not fixed. It can keep increasing with time/inflation.
Perpetuitys were illegal and invalid..
As people were saying in opposition before the Revolutionary War, "Why would I exchange one king living 1000 miles away for 1000 kings living one mile away?" Instead of kings, though, now we have HOA board members.
The recent you’re complaining about is the reason that people want HOA what’s the color roof that she wanted pink with purple polkadots? Some people like to live in the communities without somebody expressing their artistic values on their house. They want you to cut your lawn regularly and not park cars on the lawn.
@@hkiajtaqks5253
HOA fines and fees don’t change their part of the bylaws. You can ask what they are before you move in.
True example of “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
After living in a strong HOA community in Florida, I will never buy another piece of property that is under HOA DOMINATION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! As more people wake up, the value of homes will decrease in HOA communities.
Did an HOA once. It was good for about 10 years but then it wasn't. Board of director positions in HOA seem to attract all the petty tyrants and power tripping people.
One of the questions in this video was does an HOA make property more valuable. In my opinion it makes it less valuable. For example I will never purchase another home with any kind of HOA. I think houses without them are more valuable.
Never again
In other words Karens and Darens.
I agree. We bought our first home in 2010 and no HOA. We specifically wanted to avoid HOA's because the whole point of moving from renting to ownership for us was so that you don't have someone looking over your shoulder and telling you what you're allowed to do. We want to have pets, paint our house according to our choice of colors, landscape our yard as we wish, etc. I will never buy a home with an HOA. Total deal-breaker. So yes, from my viewpoint, as one who values individuality and freedom of expression, they reduce home values.
My HOA used to alright, then this little weasel, her parents died and she inherited the house, completely useless her whole life and weaseled her way onto our HOA as President and is trying to turn it into one of those terrible HOAs. People stopped going to meeting because they hate her so much.
As they mention in the video, there's good ones and bad ones. Good ones mean tidy yards, maybe some nice amenities, and very little management. Bad ones mean over management and big fish in tiny ponds. If it's an area with the former, people tend to pay more for the well-kept neighborhoods than the ones with junkyards. If it's the latter, people like to avoid them unless they desire that lifestyle.
Sure, you say that now. Wait until your neighbor, in your NON HOA neighborhood paints his house lime green, starts restoring some "classic" car in his garage which he welds on till midnight every night. Starts to build an illegal non-permit room addition, starts to raise pit bulls, adult kids move back home with alcohol and drug issues......you will be PRAYING to move back into a HOA neighborhood!
My wife insisted we buy a house that was NOT subject to an HOA. Never regretted it.
Smart move! 😮
You'd think a country so bent on convincing the world that it is the land of the free would be the last place an HOA would take root.
Exactly!
Land of the free, home of unrestrained Capitalism and corporate lobbying.
Land of the fees, home of the modern day slaves...
The man who wrote America's National Anthem was a slave owner for 43 years in the state of Maryland. It wasn't the land of the free, it was the land of slavery, that had 1.2 million slaves in 1814 when the anthem was written.
try trash: in LA you MUST use the same mafia outfit is you want to demo/permit/time frame. In Canada we call a one ton truck., lots of companies, and load up for the transfer station. Not in Free USA. NO, you can't. !! Surprise!
Damn that’s a hero’s story
When we sold our last home in Dallas in 2021 our realtor specifically listed "No HOA" as an amenity. She told us that 65%-70% of her clients ask to see only listings with no HOA's. We had a contract 12 hours after listing our home for full asking price.
How is the HOA charging the poor woman for past fixes when she didn’t even own the home yet?! That’s a nightmare, shouldn’t it go away when the old owner moved out? The hell is wrong with the HOA?
They are crooks, stealing all the fines. It's more common than you think, and some are finally being prosecuted.
Sounds like the settlement company dropped the ball.
Would be a similar situation to a condominium. Here, when a condo sells, the purchaser's lawyer sees that they get a clean Estoppel Certificate from the condominium corporation saying that there are no outstanding issues or amounts owing on the unit. Otherwise the new owner would inherit all debt secured against the condo unit. Estoppel is a principle under law that prevents someone from arguing/asserting a right that contradicts what they previously said or agreed to by law. So if they commit to a new purchaser that there are no amounts owing from before the purchase, they can't take legal action against the new owner for such a balance owing. (They could still track down the previous owner to try to collect, but the new owner is clear of the matter.)
Pays to have a professional obtaining and reviewing documents.
Sounds like she didn't use a conveyancer and it's her fault for being cheap then. "It's Just Business".
This is a good example that's why you should always hire a lawyer in any real estate deal. The Sellers realtor always says he has your back, but never believe that. If someone does not get paid unless the deal goes through, then they can never be trusted to have your best interest.
It's amazing how many scams are happening at all times in this country. This seemingly unstoppable greed is what will be the end of us.
It's all going to crash they are scooping up as much as they can while they can
The US is an oligarchy and unfortunately, since both of the state approved puppet political parties are owned by the same corporate donors, things won't improve until more ordinary people wake up, see what's going on and demand change. Trying to explain to Europeans how it is in the US, is funny at times but they are also deeply sorry for Americans and the poor quality of life in the US for most ordinary Americans.
Many of 3rd World countries started punishing their own people a long time ago. I already feeling that with HOA
I’ve been living with an HOA for 18 years. Trust me when I say NEVER buy a home with an HOA.
This is Insane! I refuse to buy a home in a community that has an HOA! I REFUSE!
Me too. HOAs are evil.
I backed down from purchasing a home because when we were about to sign they let us know there was an HOA…. I paid all the fines and walked away. I will die homeless before living in a place with an HOA.
good for you ''I paid all the fines and walked away ' money WELL spent, unlike stupid, careless people who give in to HOA, after they move in they find out how wrong it was, most people agree and regret it...
You really weren't reading the paperwork then - the CCR's (Conditions, Covenants and
Restrictions) should be WELL known before closing.
In my opinion y did the right choice
Preach! That was my first requirement before buying a home, no HOAs!
Amazing!!! They STILL dinged your wallet for a quick profit.
When I bought my first home I automatically excluded everyone that was in an HOA neighborhood. Why? Because I rented in an HOA neighborhood before. All of the stories people are telling, all true
Back in the day when our parents bought homes and I’m talking about single-family homes, everybody was responsible for keeping their yard together in their house together and people actually had pride in doing so I honestly believe that Home association is nothing more than the middleman charging you fees, that would ultimately buy them separate properties around the world you will never know and the way they did this couple this issupports my thoughts on Home association feel like when I go to Ralph’s there should be several people with petitions to get rid of Home association fees. I would be so happy to sign several of those because I don’t believe Home association should be added on single family dwellings
For condominiums it’s necessary, but for a stand alone home it’s questionable. Especially in a single family home community I would deeply scrutinize an HOA before moving in. Personally, I’ll risk living next to a “House of Davids” where someone is doing weird things.
It’s a way for the town the property is in to not have to maintain the streets, sewer lines, water, etc. I’m in the Midwest, so snow plowing would fall on the town/ municipality, but that isn’t an added cost to the town. The best deal for the town, they still assess your taxes the same as a home without an hoa, without providing those extra services, that should be taken care of by your taxes!
Wendy as a prior Condo HOA Board Member & Manager I agree.
Agreed. I don't understand why the townhouses need HOA. And they are so powerful, like city officials who give a fine for not mowering lawn in their desired way.
@@sunsetparkbayridge11232For townhouses, you share a roof with your neighbors, and siding, so you need someone to be the referee in picking colors, style etc.
@sunsetparkbayridge11232 come to seattle lol. Tons of townhomes don't got HOAs here, you can tell by their street side yards and etc all over grown and just being a jungle lol.
After living in HOAs all of my life, I moved onto acreage and can not even begin to express how nice it is to have the final say of my own property.
Only way to go.
@@bobbybishop5662 I’ll second that. I have 13 acres in a rural area. No HOA! The only thing that my purchase contract said that I couldn’t do on my land was run a feed lot for cattle.
@@ssmt2 start a pig farm lol.
@@ssmt2😂😂
@@bobbybishop5662😅
One of the primary selling points of the house I bought in 21 was no HOA. Way too many horror stories and shady management companies.
Doesnt an HOA kind of defeat the purpose and dream of being an independent homeowner 🤷♂️
YES
You’ll never catch me dead living in a HOA ever again. We exhausted every legal option to try to get anything done and the next step was taking the law into our own hands. And trust me, I was ready. We opted to move instead because I KNOW no court in this country would have taken my side after I…ahem…crossed certain lines.
When you look at everything Marvin Heemeyer went though, you can understand where he was coming from and why he did what he did.
@@bwofficial1776 Merv and the legend of the KillDozer will live on forever.
Need laws to restrict HOA powers. Also, force cities and towns to allow both HOA and non-HOA new constructions. Free market and choice is important.
State and municipalities are using HOAs as a way to offload costs to homeowners. But these homeowners pay property taxes like anyone else and are entitled to property benefits like anyone else. Also many HOAs are managed by private companies that claim to "represent" the owners. It's a complete ripoff and needs to be abolished ASAP.
Most property taxes on their own cannot cover the costs to maintain the neighborhood, especially for single family homes in the suburbs. This is why the municipalities are offloading the liabilities, they cannot afford it unless property taxes go up.
Exactly.
And they're trying to offload responsibility because all these garbage new developments aren't sustainable from a tax perspective.
The taxes they pay do not cover the cost of infrastructure for their homes. Single-family homes require very expensive infrastructure because of how low-density they are. Cities are requiring it because they know property taxes won't come close to covering the cost
This doesn't make sense because their "HOA" taxes could just go to their municipality or county instead. Also calls into question how sustainable the whole "single 'family'" "zoning" thing is. It's large pieces of land being "developed" under this particular "zoning" but much harder to find places for actual majority of families working for average wages in the community. Yet this whole failed "system" keeps going on automatic pilot over the cliff bankrupting most families and society.
Hi, I live in Ontario, California Homeowners Association (HOA). I am dealing with an illegal property lien placed on my home, and a board is unable to produce evidence that the emergency special assessment was valid (ESA). The reason for the ESA was alleged that our new property management company discovered poor bookkeeping by our prior management company, which was to the tune of $200,000.00. Such a discovery should been followed by hiring an independent accountant to conduct an audit, but it wasn't. The new property management's long-time attorney, now our HOA's attorney, said "no audits were conducted, but there is evidence", they produced none. I have delivered certified letters requesting copies of the records that validate the esa to no avail.
Challenge them in with a Small Court Claim
And put off till bk? With you paying both lawyers..sucker????
HOA boards are honey pots for sociopaths.
Imagine working for an abusive narcissistic boss, then coming home to an abusive narcissistic HOA. You lose so much money and sanity when you live in an HOA community.
HOA has lawyers who have been educated enough to use power in the wrong way
I did armed security; mobile patrol 🚓 briefly at a large gated community, HOA-golf club. About 30% were seniors(over 60), maybe 10% of 🏠 were Air B&Bs/2nd homes. The place had a few Karen types, HOA 🦈 who would yip & yap.
An HOA should have no right to place extra fines or place a lien against somebody else's property. They are honestly the worst thing to live under and should be abolished in 99% of communities.
In 2020 in the beginning of COVID I lost my husband and HOA went after my condo, the HOA lawyer was sending me letters with crazy amount of money I had to pay to avoid a foreclosure. So my dearest neighbor she is working in law department, so she look up all documents and finished all foreclosure letters right away by calling to HOA lawyer
This story many people still remember, it was a horror time of my life. I did paid all my savings to keep my condo and memory of my dearest husband.
Never buying a home with HOA. A board full of low lifes with nothing going on in their lives on a power trip will ruin home ownership.
UK here. For a country who are all about freedom you really like to remove any and all freedom. It's a totalitarianism stare without the military.
You cant even buy a house in London, sit down.
that's why they have social housing Also there's more to the UK than just London@@chiquita683
@chiquita683 neither can most of your peope in London loser
@@chiquita683hello Karen Mafia.
@@chiquita683 No, you can't, because you can't afford it, it's like trying to buy a house in New York
I live in a place that dissolves it’s HOA over a decade ago the people who were here at that time love not having an HOA anymore
That's my goal. I currently live in a COA.
The only way HOAs will go away is if people start refusing to join them or buy property managed by them. The sad truth is that if you sign the contract then you have to deal with the consequences. For us when buying a house we just cut out any option that was in an HOA regardless of what the dues were. I dont care how nice a house is or how good of a deal it is, im never allowing someone else to control what i do with my property. Some states dont even require a disclosure that a home is in an HOA which is insane. You can literally buy a house and never know you owe money until its too late.
Yes but just as Suburban design is a near monopoly on US urban planning, so to is the existence of HOAs in houses people can actually qualify for. There's not so much freedom in signing said contracts. A Sophie's choice isn't really a choice. You can argue the law all you want, but I don't have much respect for laws that uphold systems that are corrupt by design, another example of this: Student loans which would be fraudulent if they weren't run by the government directly.
How can someone say they want less government in their life, but still choose to live in an HOA community?
Because the real state market is embedded in HOA in more than 80% at least in GA. I am pretty sure it is the same experience in other states. In other instances, the realtor and the seller do not disclose the property is part of an HOA otherwise they will lose the customer like in my case. I purchased my house without any information disclosed that the property was part of an HOA until the closing date.
Parent’s old Hoa squandered thousands on useless neighborhood upgrades and mismanagement. Who in their right mind pays $80k for a row of new trees?
Moving saved them the headache and about $6k a year in fees. Unregulated Hoas are a disaster waiting to happen
Tbh that sounds like there's a corrupt middleman making money off that, no WAY did those trees actually cost that much. Smells fishy.
Doesn't seem like it. From what I see the disaster is already happening.
@@roxycauldwell544 Sounds like someone in the HOA has a family member who owns a tree business.
Actually, trees are crazy expensive. Dropping seeds on the other hand....
"You will own NOTHING and be happy (or else)"!!!
Homeowners sold their souls to avoid lawn maintenance, snow removal, and fear of a neighbor painting their house hot magenta.
Derp
What an ignorant comment.
Not necessarily. An HOA may provide few services but have many restrictions. But it can be very difficult to find a home not on an HOA in some areas.
HOA doesn’t do jack in my neighborhood.
@@BadPetunia2024 That cannot be true. Huge swathes of American houses were built before these abomination HOA's existed.
It seems to me HOA is necessary on high rise buildings because of its location and convenience. But for single family houses and communities, that's insane.
That makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
This is the case here in Canada. I’ve never seen HOAs in single house communities. Only condos and some townhouses.
And secretly get thrown off your balcony for disputing their tyranny.
They make sense in shared buildings. You wouldn't be the only guy to fix the plumbing in a condo when it goes out, so a single entity that handles all of that makes sense. HOAs on single family homes is just renting.
That last woman talking is a good human
Only difference between a HOA living and jail is freedom to cook in your own house, provided the smell does not "disturb" the "others" and come-leave at any time.
Dinner is a big thing in prison. th-cam.com/video/rQV6CijIzrc/w-d-xo.html
Have seen HOAs regulate the color of the your walls INSIDE your home.
Hahha true
@@oldtwinsna8347 what??? that's prison then
The fact that there is already an excessive amount of demand awaiting its absorption, despite how everyone is frightened and calling the crash, is another reason why it is less likely to occur that way. 2008 saw no one, at least not the broad public, making this forecast, as I'll explain below. The ownership rate was noted to have peaked in 2004 in the other comment. Having previously peaked in the second quarter of 2020, we are currently at the median level. Between 2008 and 2012, it dropped by 3%, and by the second quarter of 2020, it had dropped from 68 to 65.
Investing in both real estate and stocks can be prudent choices, particularly when backed by a robust trading strategy that can navigate you through prosperous periods.
You're not doing anything wrong; the problem is that you don't have the knowledge needed to succeed in a challenging market. Only highly qualified professionals who had to experience the 2008 financial crisis could hope to earn a high salary in these challenging conditions.
@@TomD226 Recently, I've been considering the possibility of speaking with consultants. I need guidance because I'm an adult, but I'm not sure if their services would be all that helpful.
My consultant is Laurel Dell Sroufe I found her on a CNBC interview where he was featured and reached out to her afterwards. she has since provide entry and exit points on the securities I focus on. You can look her up online if you care supervision. I basically follow her trade pattern and haven't regretted doing so.
There should be some restriction on HOA to prevent out right criminal activity like foreclosing home or asking for huge fees and garnishing wages on those fees.
When I asked my HOA president for some accountability for recent “special assessments,” she threatened to have me shunned by the rest of the community.
time do group up with your neighbours to inquiry her more times and vote her out.
Was this a cult leader or HOA president? 😂
Defensiveness because somehow she's getting something out of this.
Definitely something in her business dealings she doesn’t want anybody to know. I bet the IRS would love to know what she’s up to.
This lady really said she believes you sign away your rights. Goodness gracious... I am so blessed that I bought a home with no HOA last yr right before rates went through the roof. My family told me one day someone came by and tried to claim we live in a HOA. Let's just say they are lucky I was not home...
The previous management company: "We don't manage that property anymore, it's the new company's problem. Talk to them."
The current management company: "We can't comment on FACTS that took place while the previous company was in charge."
And this, right here, is why I will NEVER live in a home with an HOA.
Glad you were able to catch it up. This is how these two management companies have been working together for years under the same strategy. Sentry is not the “new” management company for Belmont Park as many think. Public records from the South of Atlanta demonstrate the business relationship they have since 2017.
HOA’s sound like a living hell
yeah, but STUPID people keep on doing it!
They are a living hell
Trust me, they are very evil. They take your money each month or quarter, they fine and harrass a person. That is what I experienced anyway.
When I was looking for a house in 2018, I told the realtor NO HOAs or restrictions of any kind!
HOAs or anything like them need to be outlawed in all U.S. states and territories!
Rule 1 of homebuying: Never buy into an HOA neighborhood. Period.
Rule 2 of homebuying: If buying into an HOA is unavoidable, have a trusted attorney read the bylaws and covenants to make sure there is no funny business.
Rule 3 of homebuying: If you are already in an HOA, keep a trusted attorney on retainer. These HOAs are out of control and it is only a matter of time before you will need said attorney.
Rule 4... When in doubt, always refer to rule 1
Property will be sold by then to another person .
How can you leverage your own attorney to push back against HOA overstepping?
Got a notice from the HOA to move my trampoline in my backyard to be "directly behind my house". Problem is I have a cul-de-sac lot with over half my backyard not "directly behind my house". I guess I can't use half my backyard as I see fit according to the HOA. Anyway, I spent two hours submitting a deviation request with pictures, marked up plot map, etc.. of why I thought it was already placed in a reasonable spot. They denied it with no explanation other than restating the bylaw that it must be "directly behind the house". Thanks for the thoughtful consideration! I would've left it there except my wife didn't want to lose pool privileges. BTW, if you ever need to move a trampoline you can put your kid's scooter under one side and lift the other and move it as a one person job lol! My wife was shocked when she came home and I had moved it.
That's just crazy....there's got to be a way to challenge that, a trampoline in the backyard (but visible to the street) is not destroying the neighborhood's aesthetic....HOA tyranny at its finest....
You should move. It’s gonna get worse.
@@lorrainesmith.4995 then drop your nuts and go talk to them, if it’s serious enough disturbance call the police you already pay for.
The HOA letter I got said it was 'noted during a periodic inspection' and they 'felt compelled' to notify us but understood that we 'might not know this was a rule'. Doesn't discount that it might have been a neighbor complaint but I lean that it was the HOA doing annoying HOA things. Meanwhile all the back yards that have roads right next to them - well there are several old trampolines that can seen by many more eyes from the side of their yard. I guess they are good though. Technicalities and such. Oh well, life isn't fair.
And that is EXACTLY why I despise HOAs! You are the homeowner and SHOULD have the right to do with your property as you want as long as your home and property meets county code. It is ridiculous you can’t put your trampoline where you want.
When I moved to another state and living with relatives till I found a house, the number rule with real estate agent was “NO HOA’s!!!!”
H.O.A.' are the reason why buying a house/property is difficult.
Even if an HOA does generate homeowner value, if you have to pay several hundred dollars a month into perpetuity, that's often an insurmountable hurdle rate. Its like interest payments that never end and keep going higher. More laws (or prosecution) are definitely needed to protect homeowners
Exactly.
The last 2 homes I've had have had HOAs. The first home we paid $1,200 per year for no amenities other than minimal landscaping, trash/recycling, and a general maintenance fund. We were told by the management company we never had any $ in our accounts. I'm convinced that workers at the management company were skimming a ton of $. The home I live in now we pay about ~$1,000 per year but that gets us trash and recycling service, a nice pool in the summer, workout room, several playgrounds, several neighborhood events each year (fall festival, summer crab boil, spring fling, etc..), and they do a great job of taking care of the landscaping. In general it feels like money well spent.
i see you made the same mistake twice,, cannot fix stupid!
@@karmendimas5274Why is it a mistake to be happy with good service for your money?
you should have enough sense to not be told the basics of keeping a house.. its called FREEDOM !!@@absolutium
@@karmendimas5274 No kidding Sherlock..
Does you house include a gated community.. olympic size pool or tennis court?
HOAs are terrible but a well organized residential zone can benefit from collective cooperation.
MOVE ALONG KAREN! GO KAREN SOME PLACE ELSE, YOUR PART OF THE PROBLEM AS TO WHY THE INDIVIDUAL IS LOSING THERE RIGHTS ! MOVE ON KAREN! MOVE ON! @@absolutium
The extreme irony about this is HOAs stiffen and in some rare cases LOWER home values when you look at real data. Even common sense will say if house A and house B are identical and in the same area but only house A has a HOA why would someone willing buy into that?
This stands true in my area in Central Florida. Same exact house built by a local custom/spec builder. Mine is in the HOA area 0.3 acre lot. Same exact house on 0.3 acre lot no HOA is worth 100k more. You literally have to buy freedom here now. If you experience constant undue harassment from your HOA, hire a real estate attorney :). They hate HOAs just as much as you!
One of the opening statements made in this piece is that HOAs were formed so that municipalities were no longer responsible (liable) for the care and maintenance of certain neighbourhoods but government are the ones that dictate property value. HOA seems like the legalised Mob tactics of the early days of insurance companies, where you have to use them in order to function and live and then the law intervenes to enforce their rules of operation. If people don't band together now to get rid of them this will just be the standard of life, just like the insurance world.
Everything is done now in this world to navigate from liability and this is how your city doesn't want to deal with you as a homeowner, by allowing HOA's.