What this means
Oklahoma has not enacted a statute that requires homeowner associations or condominium associations to conduct a reserve study, maintain a reserve fund at any minimum level, or follow a fixed study cycle. This does not mean reserves are prohibited — it means the state leaves the question entirely to each association's governing documents.
What governs reserves instead
In Oklahoma, reserve requirements — if any — come from the association's declaration of covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs) and its bylaws. The developer who created the community may have included reserve provisions in the original documents. Some management companies recommend reserve studies as a best practice even without a statutory mandate.
This means reserve practices in Oklahoma vary widely from one community to the next. Some associations maintain well-funded reserves backed by professional studies. Others have no reserves at all. Both are legal.
Why it matters
Without a statutory floor, an association's reserves depend entirely on the willingness of its board and members to fund them. That creates real risk:
- Special assessments. When a major component fails — a roof, an elevator, a parking structure — the cost has to come from somewhere. Without reserves, that means a special assessment, sometimes running to thousands of dollars per unit with little notice.
- Deferred maintenance. Boards under pressure to keep dues low may defer repairs indefinitely. The cost doesn't disappear — it compounds.
- Buyer blind spots. In states without a reserve-disclosure requirement, a buyer may not learn about an underfunded reserve until after closing.
What you can do
Even without a state mandate, any association can commission a reserve study. A professional study typically costs $3,000–$8,000 depending on the number of components and produces a 20- to 30-year funding plan. For a board, this is the single most defensible step you can take. For an owner, requesting that the board commission one is a reasonable ask — and the board's response tells you a lot about how the community is managed.
States that do require reserve studies
For comparison, 13 states currently mandate a reserve study on a fixed cycle. The shortest cycle is one year (Oregon); the longest is ten (Florida).
| State | Cycle |
|---|---|
| California | 3 yr |
| Delaware | 5 yr |
| Florida | 10 yr |
| Hawaii | 3 yr |
| Maryland | 5 yr |
| Minnesota | 3 yr |
| Nevada | 5 yr |
| New Jersey | 5 yr |
| Oregon | 1 yr |
| Tennessee | 5 yr |
| Utah | 3 yr |
| Virginia | 5 yr |
| Washington | 3 yr |
Next step
Put a specific Oklahoma community against these rules.
Even without a state mandate, a reserve analysis tells you where the money is. Pick the option that fits and we'll start with the state already filled in.