2024 LEGISLATIVE UPDATE
HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATIONS
HB 59
• By 10/1/24, Associations must provide a physical or digital copy of the Association’s rules and
covenants, including amendments, to every member of the Association. This requirement may be
satisfied by either providing a physical copy to every member (by mail or personal delivery), or by
posting the rules and covenants on the Association’s website and providing written notice by mail or
email (to those members who have consented to receive electronic notices) to the membership advising
that they are available digitally. F.S. 720.303(13)
HB 293
• Associations must adopt hurricane protection specifications for all dwellings within the community that
are subject to Association architectural control. The specifications may include color and style of the
permitted hurricane protection products and any other factors deemed relevant by the Board, and the
specifications must comply with all applicable building codes. The specifications may require owners
to adhere to an existing unified building scheme to maintain the exterior appearance of the building(s).
F.S. 720.3035(6)
• Types of hurricane protection products contemplated by the statute include, but are not limited to, roof
systems recognized by the Florida Building Code which meet ASCE 7-22 standards, permanent fixed
storm shutters, roll-down track storm shutters, impact-resistant windows and doors, polycarbonate
panels, reinforced garage doors, erosion controls, exterior fixed generators, and fuel storage tanks.
• It is unclear the extent to which the Association must make hurricane protection available in its
specifications. The Board should exercise its business judgment, in consultation with the appropriate
advisors, to adopt hurricane protection standards that balance the members’ ability to protect their
property and the Association’s interest in maintaining the community’s aesthetic standard.
HB 1203
• Community Association Manager (“CAM”) Regulations – A CAM or CAM firm shall do all of the
following (F.S. 468.4334):
o Annually attend at least one member meeting or board meeting of the Association.
o Provide to Association members certain information, including the contact person,
contact information, and the hours of availability.
o Provide the community’s members upon request a copy of the contract between
the Association and the CAM or CAM firm.
o Annually complete at least 10 hours of continuing education.
o Every two years complete at least five hours of continuing education that pertains to
homeowners’ Associations, three hours of which must relate to recordkeeping.
• Official Records (F.S. 720.303(4))
o By January 1, 2025, Associations with 100 or more parcels must maintain a digital copy of
certain official records on the Association’s website (which includes an online portal provided
by a CAM firm) or through an application on a mobile device. The Association must provide all members with a username and password and access to the protected sections of the website
that contain the official documents upon request.
o Associations must maintain official records for at least seven years, unless the
governing documents of the Association require a longer period of time.
o Associations must create a written record retention policy.
o Associations must provide a copy of records or otherwise make the records available that
are subpoenaed by a law enforcement agency within five days of receiving a subpoena.
o Criminal penalties are imposed for destroying or withholding records under certain
circumstances.
• Financial Reporting
o Associations with 1,000 or more parcels must prepare audited financial statements on an annual
basis regardless of the total overall budget.
o Associations may not vote to waive down the required type of financial statement (compilation,
review, or audit) for consecutive years. F.S. 720.303(7)
o Associations may not use debit cards. F.S. 720.303(13)
o Association members may make a written request for a detailed accounting of any amounts
owed to the Association. If the Association fails to provide the accounting within 15 business
days of a written request, any outstanding fines of the requester are waived if the fine is more
than 30 days past due and the Association did not give prior written notice that the fine was
imposed. Members may only request one detailed accounting every 90 days. F.S. 720.303(14)
• Director Education
o Newly elected or appointed directors must, within 90 days of being elected or appointed,
complete a certification course by a State approved provider. The educational
curriculum must include training relating to financial literacy and transparency,
recordkeeping, levying of fines, and notice and meeting requirements. The educational
certification must be renewed every 4 years. F.S. 720.3033
o Directors must now also complete ongoing continuing education as follows:
▪ Directors in Associations with fewer than 2,500 parcels must complete at
least four hours of continuing education annually.
▪ Directors in Associations with 2,500 or more parcels must complete at least
eight hours of continuing education annually.
• Fining and Enforcement
o When denying an architectural application, the Association must provide written notice to
the parcel owner of the rule or covenant relied upon for such denial. F.S. 720.3035
o The Association cannot require review of an HVAC, refrigeration, heating, or ventilating
system that is not visible from a parcel’s frontage, an adjacent parcel, common area, or
community golf course, if a substantially similar system has been previously approved.
o Associations may not prohibit an owner from inviting, hiring, or allowing entry to a contractor
or worker on the owner’s parcel solely because the contractor or worker is not on a preferred
vendor list of the homeowners’ Association or does not have a professional or occupational
license.
o Adding to the “backyard” enforcement rule passed last year, Associations may not prevent a
homeowner from installing or displaying vegetable gardens and clotheslines (in addition to
other items) in areas not visible from the frontage of the parcel, an adjacent parcel, an adjacent
common area, or a community golf course. This clarifies that the Association may still issue
backyard violations if the violation can be observed from Association common area in
addition to the frontage of the parcel and an adjoining parcel. F.S. 720.3045
o Associations may not prohibit the parking of a personal vehicle, including a pickup truck, in
the property owner’s driveway or in any other area where they have a right to park. F.S.
720.3075(3)(b)
o Associations may not prohibit a work vehicle, which is not a commercial motor vehicle as
defined by statute, in the property owner’s driveway. Florida Statute 320.01(25) defines a
commercial vehicle as exceeding 26,001 lbs. or 3 or more axels, so these are the only commercial
vehicles that can be prohibited from being parked in public view on the owner’s driveway. F.S.
720.3075(3)(b)
o Members may not be prohibited from operating a vehicle in conformance with state traffic laws
on public roads or rights-of-way or the property owner’s parcel, unless the vehicle is a
commercial motor vehicle.
o First responder vehicles may be parked anywhere that other permitted vehicles may be parked,
including on public roads or rights-of-way within the Association.
o The fining process has been modified to require the following (F.S. 720.305):
▪ The 14-day notice of the hearing must be in writing.
▪ The fining hearing must be held within 90 days of the notice of hearing.
▪ The committee may hold the hearing by telephone or other electronic means.
▪ If the violation is cured by the hearing, a fine cannot be imposed.
▪ The fining committee’s decision must be provided to the owner within 7 days
of the hearing, and such letter must also advise how the violation may be cured.
▪ The due date for paying the fine must be at least 30 days after delivery of the
written notice of the committee’s decision.
▪ Attorney fees and costs cannot be incurred for the violation the owner is being fined
for between the fining hearing and the date set for the fine to be paid. Practically,
this means that if the Association’s governing documents permit pre-litigation
attorney fees to be assessed to the owner, such fees can be incurred before the fine
is levied, and after the fining process is complete.
▪ Associations may not fine for an owner leaving garbage receptacles at the curb or
end of the driveway less than 24 hours before or after the designated garbage
collection day or time.
▪ Association may not fine for leaving holiday decorations or lights up longer than
indicated in the governing documents, unless such decorations or lights are left up
for longer than one week after the Association provides written notice of the
violation to the parcel owner.
CONDOMINIUMS
HB 1021
• Community Association Manager (“CAM”) Regulations and Conflicts of Interest – (F.S. 468.4334):
o The CAM or CAM firm must return all community Association records in their possession
within 20 business days of termination of a services agreement or a written request whichever
occurs first, with license suspension and civil penalties for noncompliance, except that the time
frames applicable to timeshare plans apply to the records of a timeshare plan.
o The following activities create a rebuttable presumption that a conflict of interest exists and
must be disclosed prior to contract being entered:
▪ The CAM or CAM firm (or their relatives) enters into a contract for goods and services
with the Association.
▪ The CAM or CAM firm (or their relatives) hold a financial interest in a company that
enters into or proposes to enter into a contract for goods and services with the
Association.
o The proposed activity that may be a conflict of interest must be listed on, and all contracts and
transactional documents related to the proposed activity must be attached to, the board’s
meeting agenda and entered into the meeting minutes.
o The Board must approve contracts with a potential conflict of interest, and all management
contracts, by an affirmative vote of two-thirds of all directors present.
o If the Association receives and considers a bid to provide a good or service that exceeds $2,500,
other than community Association management services, from a CAM or CAM firm, including
directors, officers, persons with a financial interest in a CAM firm, or a relative of such persons,
the Association must also solicit multiple bids from other third-party providers of such good or
service.
o If a CAM or CAM firm violates these conflict-of-interest provisions, the Association may
terminate their contract without penalty.
• Hurricane Protection
o The uniform definition of “hurricane protection” includes shutters, impact glass, code-compliant
windows and doors, and other code-compliant hurricane protection products used to preserve and
protect the condominium property.
o Installation and maintenance of hurricane protection is not a material alteration.
o Condominium declarations must delineate the responsibilities of unit owners and Associations
for the costs of maintenance, repair, and replacement of hurricane protections, exterior doors,
windows, and glass apertures.
o Associations may obtain a majority vote of the membership to require all owners to install
hurricane protection. A certificate of the vote must be recorded in the public record.
o Unit owners are not responsible for the cost of removal and reinstallation of hurricane protection
if the removal is necessary to repair condominium property, unless the owner is made
responsible for these costs in the Declaration.
o If hurricane protection that complies with or exceeds the current applicable building code has
been previously installed, the Board may not install the same type of hurricane protection or
require that unit owners install the same type of hurricane protection unless the unit owner
installed hurricane protection has reached the end of its useful life or it is necessary to prevent
damage to the common elements or the unit.
o The Board may require that owners adhere to an existing unified building scheme regarding the
external appearance of the condominium when installing hurricane protection.
o Unit owners are not responsible for the cost of any removal or reinstallation of hurricane
protection if its removal is necessary for the maintenance repair, or replacement of the
condominium property or Association property for which the Association is responsible.
▪ If such removal or reinstallation is completed by the Association, the Association may
not charge the costs incurred to the owner.
▪ If such reinstallation of removal is completed by the owner, the Association must
reimburse the owner for the cost or apply the cost as a credit toward future assessments
in the amount of the owner’s cost to remove or reinstall the hurricane protection.
▪ The Board is responsible to determine if removal or reinstallation of hurricane
protection must be completed by the owner or Association.
o If the removal or reinstallation of hurricane protection is the responsibility of the unit owner
and the Association completes such removal or reinstallation and then charges the unit owner
for such removal or reinstallation, such charges are enforceable as an assessment and may be
collected in the same manner as assessments under the statute.
• Milestone and SIRS
o Currently, single-family, two-family, and three-family dwellings are exempt from the milestone
inspection requirements. The bill now exempts four-family dwellings with three or fewer
habitable stories above ground.
o Associations must notify the Division within 45 days after the SIRS is completed. By January
1, 2025, the Division must create a database of Associations that have completed the SIRS.
After December 31, 2024, the Division must include in its annual report a list of all Associations
that have completed the SIRS.
o Associations must provide unit owners with a notice that the SIRS is available for inspection
and copying within 45 days of completion of the study. The notice may be provided
electronically to those members who have consented to receive electronic notices.
• Official Records
o Effective January 1, 2026, condominiums with 25 or more units must maintain specified records
on a website or mobile app.
o The division may request access to an Association’s website to investigate complaints related
to unit owner access to official records on such website.
o If official records are lost or destroyed, the Association has a good faith obligation to obtain and
recover the records as is reasonably possible.
o E-mail addresses and facsimile numbers are accessible to unit owners if consent to receive
notice by electronic transmission has been provided.
o The sale or sharing of personal information to third parties is prohibited.
o Associations must maintain the official records in an organized manner that facilitates
inspection of the records by a unit owner.
o Associations must maintain a checklist of all records made available for inspection when
responding to a record inspection request. The checklist must also identify the records that were
not made available for inspection.
o Associations must maintain additional financial records (e.g., invoices and other documentation
that substantiates any receipt or expenditure).
• Financial Reporting and Reserves
o Associations may not reduce the required type of financial statement (compiled, reviewed, or
audited financial statements) for consecutive years.
o Associations may temporarily pause the funding of reserves or reduce reserve funding if the
entire condominium building is uninhabitable due to a natural emergency, as determined by the
local enforcement agency, upon majority approval of the Board.
• Board Meetings
o Associations of 10 or more units must meet at least quarterly.
o Four times each year the agenda must allow members to ask questions to the Board – i.e.,
an open forum agenda item.
o At all Board meetings, members are permitted to ask questions concerning the status of
construction or repair projects, revenues and expenditures, and “other issues affecting the
condominium,” regardless of whether such items are on the agenda.
o Notice of meetings regarding regular or special assessments must state that such assessments
will be considered and include the cost and purpose of such assessments.
o If the agenda includes approval of a contract, a copy of the proposed contract must be provided
with the meeting notice.
• Director Education
o Newly elected or appointed directors must submit both the written certification that they have
read the Association’s governing documents, will work to uphold the documents to the best of
their ability and faithfully discharge their duties, and submit a certificate of completion of an
approved condominium education course. The course must be 4 hours of training which
includes instruction on milestone inspections, SIRS, elections, recordkeeping, financial literacy
and transparency, levying of fines, and meeting requirements.
o In addition to the initial certification class, all directors must complete 1 hour of continuing
education annually about recent changes to the condominium laws and rules during the past
year.
o Proof of compliance with the above requirements must be kept in the official records.
• Voting
o Associations must notify an owner that his or her voting rights may be suspended due to
nonpayment of a fee or other monetary obligation at least 90 days before an election.
o Unit owners may consent to electronic voting in elections by using an electronic means of
consent.
o If the Association authorizes online voting, the Board must honor an owner’s request to vote
electronically at all subsequent elections, unless the owner opts out.
• SLAPP and Defamation Suits
o The law revises the prohibitions against “strategic lawsuits against public participation” or
“SLAPP” suits, which occur when Association members are sued by individuals, business
entities, or governmental entities for matters arising out of a unit owner’s appearance and
presentation before a governmental entity on matters related to the Association. The bill
includes condominium Associations in the SLAPP suit prohibition, and protects unit owners
who report complaints to government agencies or law enforcement, or make public statements
critical of the operation or management of an Association by prohibiting Associations from:
▪ Retaliating against unit owners by increasing assessments, threatening to bring an
action for possession or other civil action; and
▪ Spending Association funds in support of defamation, libel, or tortious interference
actions against a unit owner
• The Division of Condominiums, Timeshares and Mobile Homes (“The Division”)
o The bill expands the Division’s post-turnover jurisdiction to include:
▪ Procedures and records related to financial issues, including annual financial reporting,
assessments for common expenses, fines, and commingling funds;
▪ Elections, including election and voting requirements, and recall of board members;
▪ The maintenance of and unit owner access to Association records;
▪ The procedural aspects of meetings, such as unit owner meetings, quorums, voting
requirements, proxies, board of administration meetings, and budget meetings;
▪ Disclosure of conflicts of interest;
▪ Removal of a board director or officer under chapter 718, F.S.;
▪ The procedural completion of structural integrity reserve studies; and
▪ Any written inquiries by unit owners to the Association.
o In addition, the bill:
▪ Requires that the Division must refer to local law enforcement authorities any person
it believes has engaged in any criminal activity.
▪ Provides that the Division and the office of the condominium ombudsman may attend
and observe any meeting of the board or any unit owner meeting, for the purpose of
performing the duties of the division or the office of the ombudsman.
▪ For Fiscal Year 2024-2025, appropriates $6,122,390 in recurring and $1,293,879 in
nonrecurring funds from the General Revenue Fund to the Department of Business and
Professional Regulation, and 65 full-time equivalent positions with an associated salary
rate, for the purpose of implementing the bill.
• Criminal Violations
The bill provides the following criminal penalties for the below acts:
▪ Second degree misdemeanor for any director or member of the board or Association
to knowingly, willfully, and repeatedly violate (two or more violations within a 12month
period) any specified requirements relating to inspection and copying of official records of an Association;
▪First degree misdemeanor for knowingly and intentionally defacing or destroying
required accounting records, or failing to create or maintain required accounting
records, with the intent of causing harm to the Association or one or more of its
members;
▪ Third degree felony to willfully and knowingly refuse to release or produce Association
records, with the intent to avoid or escape detection, arrest, trial, or punishment for the
commission of a crime, or to assist another person with such avoidance or escape;
▪ Third degree felony for an officer, director, or manager of a condominium Association
to knowingly solicit, offer to accept, or accept a kickback; and
▪ First degree misdemeanor for engaging in specified fraudulent voting activity, and
knowingly aiding, abetting, or advising a person in the commission of a fraudulent
voting activity related to Association elections.
• Miscellaneous
o The attendance of a director at a meeting of the board is sufficient to constitute a quorum for
the meeting, and for any vote taken in his or her absence, if the director is required to leave the
room during the discussion and voting on a contract in which the director, or a relative, has an
interest.
o The statute of repose (the ultimate deadline for filing legal action) for certain actions will not
begin to run until the unit owners have elected a majority of the members of the Board. This is
especially relevant for construction defect claims.
o The annual financial statement and annual budget of the Association must be given to a
prospective purchaser of a unit by a non-developer seller of a unit.
o Developers of nonresidential condominiums have the option of delivering to the escrow agent
a surety bond or an irrevocable letter of credit with specified conditions.
o Escrow requirements for developers have been revised.
o The definition for the term “condominium property” is revised to mean “the lands, leaseholds,
improvements, any personal property, and all easements and rights appurtenant thereto,
regardless of whether contiguous, which are subjected to condominium ownership.”
o Effective October 1, 2024, the bill provides disclosure requirements for the creation of
condominiums within a portion of a building or within a multiple parcel building. The
Association of a condominium created within a portion of a building or within a multiple parcel
building has the right to inspect and copy the books and records upon which the costs for
maintaining and operating the shared facilities are based and to receive an annual budget with
respect to such costs.
MY SAFE FLORIDA HOME
HB 1029
• The program is available to condominium Associations located within 15 miles of a coastline and is
regulated by the Department of Financial Services (“DFS”). It provides for hurricane mitigation
inspections and grants to Associations if the following conditions are met:
o Inspections
▪ Must be approved by either a majority of the Board or a majority of the total voting
interests of the community.
▪ Will be conducted at no cost to the Association and will identify:
• The present mitigation measures that are needed.
• Insurance premium discounts that may be available.
• The improvements to existing Association property that are needed to reduce
the property’s vulnerability to hurricane damage.
▪ The inspection will include, at a minimum:
• An inspection of the property.
• A report that summarizes the results of the inspection.
• Recommended mitigation improvements.
• Estimated cost of such improvements.
• Information regarding potential insurance premium savings.
▪ The application for inspection must contain a signed or electronically verified
statement made under penalty of perjury by the president of the Board that the
Association has submitted only a single application for each property the Association
operates or maintains.
▪ The Association may apply for an inspection without also applying for a grant.
o Grants
▪ The grant may be used to make improvements recommended in the hurricane
mitigation inspection report.
▪ The application for grant must:
• Contain a signed or electronically verified statement made under penalty of
perjury by the president of the Board that the Association has submitted only
a single application for each property the Association operates or maintains.
• Include a notarized statement from the President of the Board containing the
name and license number of each contractor the Association intends to use for
the mitigation projects.
• Include a notarized statement from the President of the Board which commits
to the DFS that the Association will complete the mitigation projects.
▪ For common element projects, the grant application must be approved by either a
majority of the Board or a majority of the total voting interest.
▪ For grants benefiting individual units, the grant application must be approved by a
unanimous vote of all unit owners within the structure or building that is the subject of
the grant.
▪ The Association may choose its own contractors so long as they meet all qualification,
certification, and licensing requirements in general law.
▪ The mitigation projects must be completed, or an extension requested, within 1 year
of the grant approval. The projects must be completed and pass inspection before the
grant money is issued.
▪ Grants shall be awarded as follows:
• All grants must be matched on the basis of $1 provided by the Association
and $2 provided by the State.
• For roof-related projects, the grant contribution is $11 per square foot
multiplied by the square footage of the replacement roof, not to exceed $1,000
per unit, with a maximum grant award of 50% of the cost of the project.
• For opening-related projects, the grant contribution is a maximum of $750 per
replacement window or door, not to exceed $1,500 per unit, with a maximum
grant award of 50% of the cost of the project.
• An Association may receive grant funds for both roof and opening projects,
but the maximum total award is $175,000 per Association.
Pasco: 5901 US Highway 19 Ste 7Q NPR, FL 34652
Pinellas: 1301 Seminole Blvd. Ste 110 Largo, FL 33770
Citrus: 6606 W Gulf to Lake Hwy Crystal River, FL 34429