State laws
New Jersey reserve and disclosure rules
The New Jersey statutes and agency rules that govern reserves, budgets, and HOA disclosures — translated into plain language with the source cited. Not legal advice.
New Jersey condo board meeting notice rules, in plain language
How New Jersey's Condominium Act handles board meeting notice — 48 hours written advance notice plus physical posting on the property and filing with the business office, open meetings required except working sessions, and why owner participation remains at the board's discretion.
LawNew Jersey condominium reserve funding rules, in plain language
How New Jersey's Condominium Act actually handles reserves — through mandatory fund-handling and accounting rules for reserve funds once identified, without itself imposing a reserve-study cadence or funding formula — and what that means for a board, owner, or buyer alongside the separate PREDFDA reserve-study overlay.
LawNew Jersey HOA board meeting notice rules, in plain language
How New Jersey's Planned Real Estate Development Full Disclosure Act handles board meeting notice — 48 hours written advance notice for any meeting where a binding vote will be taken, open meetings required, and an annual schedule posting requirement.
LawNew Jersey HOA reserve funding rules, in plain language
How New Jersey's Planned Real Estate Development Full Disclosure Act and the 2024 Structural Integrity Law actually handle reserves — through a mandatory capital reserve study on a five-year cadence, a 30-year funding plan, credentialed preparer requirements, structural inspections for covered buildings, and a time-limited 85 percent reduced-funding option — and what that means for a board, owner, or buyer.
Next step
Want to see how these New Jersey 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.