State laws

Delaware reserve and disclosure rules

The Delaware statutes and agency rules that govern reserves, budgets, and HOA disclosures — translated into plain language with the source cited. Not legal advice.

Law

Delaware HOA and condo board meeting notice rules, in plain language

How Delaware's Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act handles board meeting notice for all community types — a 10–60-day statutory window, mandatory quarterly meetings, open meetings after developer turnover, and a 60-day window to challenge improperly noticed actions.

Del. Code tit. 25, § 81-308A — Delaware Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act, executive board meetings
Law

Delaware condo reserve funding rules, in plain language

How Delaware's Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act and legacy Unit Property Act handle condominium reserves — with minimum-percentage budget allocations, a reserve-study framework, and phase-in timelines for older communities — and what that means for a condo board, owner, or buyer.

25 Del. C. ch. 81 — Delaware Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (§§ 81-103, 81-315, 81-324); 25 Del. C. ch. 22 — Unit Property Act (§§ 2244–2246)
Law

Delaware HOA reserve funding rules, in plain language

How Delaware's Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act and legacy Unit Property Act actually handle reserves — with an explicit repair-and-replacement reserve definition, a five-year reserve-study concept, and minimum-percentage allocations for some condos — and what that means for a board, owner, or buyer.

25 Del. C. ch. 81 — Delaware Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (subchapter III: management, including §§ 81-315 and 81-324); 25 Del. C. ch. 22 — Unit Property Act (subchapter VIII)

Next step

Want to see how these Delaware rules apply to a specific HOA?

Reading the rule is step one. Putting it against a real budget is step two — pick the option that fits and we'll start with the state already filled in.