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Propty Research · 2026

California Davis-Stirling Compliance Cost Index

A Self-Managed HOA Benchmark

California has more community associations than any other state, and a large share run without a professional manager. This study maps the recurring Davis-Stirling Act obligations those self-managed boards must meet — each tied to its California Civil Code section — and pairs them with a modeled annual cost index. Statutory facts are verified against the official code; cost figures are clearly labeled modeled estimates.

Last reviewed 2026-06-21. Scope: California common-interest developments (condominiums and planned developments).

The self-managed California HOA benchmark

51,700

California community associations

Foundation for Community Association Research (2025) — the most of any state

14.5 million

Californians living in a community association

Foundation for Community Association Research (2025)

≈23.7%

California owner-occupied homes paying an HOA / condo fee

U.S. Census American Community Survey (2024)

$278

California median monthly HOA fee

U.S. Census ACS (2024) — 9th-highest, ≈106% above the $135 national median

12,900–20,700Estimate

Estimated self-managed California associations

Derived: 25–40% self-managed share (industry estimate) applied to 51,700 CA associations

$3,000–$15,000Estimate

Modeled annual Davis-Stirling compliance-admin cost (self-managed, 50–150 units)

Propty model — sum of the out-of-pocket line items in the Index; excludes insurance premiums, legal fees, and routine operating costs

The Davis-Stirling Compliance Cost Index

Each row is a recurring statutory obligation, its governing Civil Code section, how often it recurs, and a modeled annualized out-of-pocket cost for a self-managed California association of roughly 50–150 units. The statute and cadence are verified facts; the dollar ranges are modeled estimates (see Methodology).

ObligationCivil CodeCadenceWhoAnnualized cost*
Reserve study with on-site visual inspection of major componentsSelf-managed boards must source, vet, and schedule the vendor themselves — a manager would normally hold that relationship.Civil Code §5550At least every 3 years (annualized below)Credentialed reserve-study professional (RS / PRA / PE)$500–$1,350/yr
Independent CPA review of year-end financial statements (if gross revenue ≥ $75,000)Triggered at just $75k revenue, which most associations above ~25–40 units clear. The board must engage the CPA and prepare clean books for review.Civil Code §5305Annual (within 120 days of fiscal year-end)Licensed California CPA$1,500–$5,000/yr
Monthly budget-to-actual review, bank reconciliations, and operating-fund accountingWithout a management company's back office, a volunteer treasurer either does the monthly close or pays a bookkeeper out of the operating budget.Civil Code §5500Monthly (ongoing bookkeeping)Treasurer or outsourced bookkeeper$600–$3,600/yr
Annual budget report, annual policy statement, and §5570 Assessment & Reserve Funding Disclosure SummaryA multi-document package with statutory content and a prescribed disclosure form — easy to miss components when assembled by hand from templates.Civil Code §5300Annual (30–90 days before fiscal year-end)Board (often with CPA / software assistance)$0–$1,500/yr
Independent inspector of elections + secret double-envelope ballot electionThe board legally cannot run or count its own election. Self-managed boards must retain an independent inspector and mailing vendor for every member vote.Civil Code §5110Per election (typically annual)Independent inspector of elections / election vendor$300–$3,000/yr
Exterior elevated element (balcony / deck / stair) inspection for condos with 3+ unitsApplies to condominium projects with exterior elevated elements. The report must also feed the reserve study, adding a coordination step.Civil Code §5551By Jan 1, 2025, then at least every 9 years (annualized below)Licensed structural/civil engineer or architect$110–$560/yr
Board-meeting notices (4-day) with agenda, and minutes within 30 daysNo direct cost, but a recurring volunteer-time obligation with a hard 4-day clock that is easy to miss without a calendaring system.Civil Code §4920Each regular meeting (monthly/quarterly)Board secretaryVolunteer time
Member records production — 10 business days for current-year financials, category deadlines otherwiseTight, category-specific deadlines (SB 410 (2025) amended §5210 with a 10-business-day clock for current-year financials, eff. 1/1/2026) with member penalties for misses — hard to track on a volunteer's calendar.Civil Code §5210On member requestBoard / records custodianVolunteer time
Pre-lien notice (30-day, certified mail) + Internal Dispute Resolution before any lien/foreclosureA defective pre-lien notice can void the lien. Self-managed boards usually pay an attorney per matter rather than carrying counsel on retainer.Civil Code §5660Per delinquencyBoard (often with HOA attorney)Volunteer time
Statutory insurance program: CGL ($2M/$3M), D&O ($500k/$1M), and fidelity (reserves + 3 months assessments)Meeting the statutory minimums is what triggers member and volunteer-director immunity. Premiums vary widely and are excluded from the administration total below.Civil Code §5805Annual premiumLicensed insurer / brokerPremium varies*
Modeled annual compliance-administration cost (excludes insurance premiums, legal fees, routine operating costs)$3,010$15,010/yr

*Cost figures are modeled estimates for a self-managed association of ~50–150 units, not measured statistics. “Premium varies” items are statutory minimums whose cost depends on the insurance market and are excluded from the total.

Verified statutory thresholds & deadlines

The hard numbers behind the Index. Each is a Davis-Stirling Act requirement with its exact Civil Code citation, linked to the official statute text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.

Statutory requirementCitation
Notice (with agenda) of a regular board meeting must reach members at least 4 days in advance; executive-session-only meetings at least 2 days.Civil Code §4920
Minutes (or a draft summary) of each open board meeting must be available to members within 30 days.Civil Code §4950
Board-only regular assessment increases are capped at 20% per fiscal year; board-only special assessments at 5% of budgeted gross expenses. Above those, a member vote is required.Civil Code §5605
Members must receive 30–60 days' advance notice before an increased regular or special assessment takes effect.Civil Code §5615
The annual budget report must be distributed to members 30–90 days before the end of the fiscal year.Civil Code §5300
The annual policy statement must be distributed to members 30–90 days before fiscal year-end.Civil Code §5310
Associations with annual gross revenue of $75,000 or more must have year-end financial statements reviewed by a licensed California CPA, distributed within 120 days of fiscal year-end.Civil Code §5305
The board must review actual income and expenses against budget, plus bank reconciliations, on at least a monthly basis.Civil Code §5500
A reserve study with visual inspection of major components must be performed at least once every 3 years.Civil Code §5550
Every annual budget report must include the Assessment and Reserve Funding Disclosure Summary on the form prescribed by statute.Civil Code §5570
Board elections must be administered by an independent inspector of elections using a secret double-envelope (or equivalent) ballot.Civil Code §5110
Pre-ballot general notice must go out at least 30 days before ballots are distributed, and ballots at least 30 days before the voting deadline.Civil Code §5115
Election materials are held by the inspector of elections through the §5145 challenge period, then transferred to the association as association records; ongoing member access is then governed by the §5200/§5210 records-inspection rules.Civil Code §5125
Current-year financial records requested by a member must be produced within 10 business days. SB 410 (2025) amended §5210's records-access provisions (effective January 1, 2026).Civil Code §5210
Member record-inspection requests are governed by category-specific production deadlines, with charges limited to the actual cost of duplication.Civil Code §5210
Before recording an assessment lien, the association must send a pre-lien notice at least 30 days in advance by certified mail, with the required statutory disclosures and the right to Internal Dispute Resolution.Civil Code §5660
Assessment-debt foreclosure is prohibited unless the delinquency is at least $1,800 (excluding fines/costs) or more than 12 months past due, authorized by board vote in executive session.Civil Code §5720
Condominium projects with three or more units must have exterior elevated elements (balconies, decks, stairs, walkways) inspected by a licensed professional — first inspection due by January 1, 2025, then at least every 9 years (SB 326).Civil Code §5551
Commercial general liability coverage must be at least $2 million for associations with 100 or fewer separate interests, $3 million for more, to trigger member tort immunity.Civil Code §5805
Directors-and-officers liability coverage must be at least $500,000 (100 or fewer units) or $1 million (more) to trigger volunteer director/officer immunity.Civil Code §5800
Fidelity (crime) coverage must at least equal reserve balances plus three months of total assessments, and must extend to a managing agent if one is used.Civil Code §5806

Methodology

Statutory layer (verified). Every obligation, deadline, threshold, and cadence is taken from the California Civil Code (Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act, §4000–§6150) and cross-checked against Propty’s fact-checked California HOA Compliance Health Check. Each cite links to the official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.

Cost layer (modeled). Dollar ranges are modeled estimates for a self-managed association of roughly 50–150 units, annualizing multi-year obligations (a reserve study every 3 years; an exterior-elevated-element inspection on a 9-year cycle). They are illustrative planning figures, not measured survey data, and exclude insurance premiums, per-matter legal fees, and routine operating/maintenance spend.

Prevalence layer (sourced). California association and resident counts are from the Foundation for Community Association Research; fee and fee-paying-share figures are from the U.S. Census American Community Survey. The self-managed share is an industry estimate (25–40%) applied to the state association count and is labeled as derived.

Legal review. The statutory layer — including recent bill-number attributions (e.g. SB 410 records-access and SB 326 exterior-elevated-element amendments) and the re-inspection cadence — was reviewed against the current Civil Code text and corrected. This page is an educational summary, not legal advice; confirm any compliance decision with a qualified California HOA attorney.

Cite this as

Propty (datasamy, Inc.). (2026). California Davis-Stirling Compliance Cost Index: A Self-Managed HOA Benchmark. Retrieved from https://www.propty.io/en/research/california-davis-stirling-compliance-cost-index

Data may be reused with attribution to Propty under CC BY 4.0. A link to this page is appreciated.

Sources

  1. California Civil Code, Division 4, Part 5 (Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act, §4000–§6150)California Legislative Information (leginfo.legislature.ca.gov) (2026).
  2. Community Association Fact Book 2025 — U.S. national and California state data (California: 51,700 associations; 14.5M residents)Foundation for Community Association Research (2025).
  3. Community Association Fact Book 2025 (national totals: ~373,000 associations, 78.1M residents)Foundation for Community Association Research (2025).
  4. American Community Survey, HOA/condo fee tables (national median $135/mo; CA $278/mo; ≈23.7% of CA owner-occupied homes pay an HOA fee), as compiled in HOA StatisticsU.S. Census Bureau / iPropertyManagement (2024).
  5. Propty Compliance Cost Index model — annualized out-of-pocket estimates per the methodology on this pagePropty (datasamy, Inc.) (2026).

Educational summary only — not legal advice. Confirm any compliance decision with the current Civil Code text and a qualified California HOA attorney.