TLDR
Michigan MCL §559.205 requires condominiums to allocate at least 10% of their current annual budget to reserves, making Michigan one of only two states with an explicit minimum percentage (alongside Hawaii). No reserve study is mandated by statute. The 10% floor is a minimum, not a recommended target.
Michigan’s condominium law (MCL 559.101 et seq.) places real obligations on volunteer boards. MCL 559.157 requires associations to hold reserve funds in a separate, dedicated account and restrict their use to capital expenditures and deferred maintenance. Boards that treat reserves as a buffer for operating overruns expose themselves to personal liability under the fiduciary duty standard in MCL 559.152. Michigan courts do not give volunteer boards a pass because they were unpaid, the duty of care applies regardless.
The Detroit metro area alone has thousands of condominium associations, many with aging common elements: parking structures, elevators, roofs, and HVAC systems representing substantial capital expenditures. Grand Rapids and Lansing are adding new associations through suburban development, but new construction does not eliminate the reserve obligation. Reserves must be funded from day one. Boards that inherit underfunded reserves from a developer transition face a difficult situation, and commissioning a reserve study early is the most important corrective step they can take.
Gavelhouse was built for volunteer treasurers managing real statutory obligations without a staff accountant or dedicated compliance officer. The platform separates operating and reserve accounts at the software level, making commingling structurally difficult, and tracks reserve fund balances alongside the capital items that depend on them. Michigan boards use it to document their reserve funding rationale, the foundation of any good-faith fiduciary defense.
10% Minimum Reserve Allocation (MCL §559.205)
Michigan MCL §559.205 requires condominium associations to allocate at least 10% of their current annual budget to reserves. This makes Michigan one of only two states (alongside Hawaii) with an explicit minimum percentage for reserve funding. The 10% is a statutory floor, not a recommended target, and boards should fund above this level when reserve studies indicate higher needs.
Reserve Account Requirement (MCL 559.157)
Michigan condominium associations must establish and maintain a reserve fund separate from the operating account. MCL 559.157 requires that reserve funds be held in a dedicated account and used only for capital expenditures and deferred maintenance, not for routine operating expenses.
No Reserve Study Mandate
Michigan does not mandate a formal reserve study by statute, but MCL 559.157 requires the board to assess the long-term capital needs of common elements. Courts have interpreted the fiduciary duty standard under MCL 559.152 to require boards to have a reasonable basis for reserve funding levels. A reserve study remains the defensible standard.
Annual Budget and Disclosure (MCL 559.169)
Michigan condo boards must prepare an annual budget and distribute it to all co-owners at least 10 days before adoption. The budget must include both operating expenses and reserve contributions. Boards that skip this step expose themselves to challenges from unit owners.
Fannie Mae Reserve Allocation Requirement
Fannie Mae Lender Letter LL-2026-03 sets two deadlines: (1) The Limited Review process for condo projects is retired effective August 3, 2026. (2) The minimum reserve allocation increases from 10% to 15% for Full Review loan applications dated on or after January 4, 2027. Associations below the 15% threshold will be classified as non-warrantable, preventing conventional mortgage lending on units in the community.
Board Liability Safe Harbor
Michigan courts apply the business judgment rule to HOA board decisions. Boards that act in good faith, document their reserve funding rationale, and engage professional assessments substantially reduce their exposure to personal liability claims from unit owners.
| Metro Area | Estimated HOA Communities | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Detroit Metro (Wayne, Oakland, Macomb) | ~9,000+ | Largest concentration; mix of condo and planned community associations |
| Grand Rapids | ~3,000+ | Growing suburban development driving new association formation |
| Lansing | ~1,500+ | State capital region; significant condo concentration near MSU |
| Flint / Saginaw | ~800+ | Smaller market; older condo stock with deferred maintenance risk |
Q&A
What does Michigan law require for HOA reserve funds?
MCL §559.205 requires Michigan condominium associations to allocate at least 10% of their annual budget to reserves, making Michigan one of only two states with an explicit minimum percentage. MCL 559.157 requires reserves to be held in a dedicated account separate from operating funds.
Q&A
Are Michigan HOA boards personally liable for reserve fund failures?
Volunteer board members can face personal liability for breach of fiduciary duty if they fail to maintain adequate reserves and a unit owner suffers harm as a result, such as a large unexpected special assessment or a decline in property value attributable to deferred maintenance.
See how Gavelhouse handles compliance in one system
Start the full-access trial, choose an annual plan later, and keep the 30-day guarantee.
Start Free TrialReady to get your Michigan HOA board compliant?
- State-specific compliance
- Board-ready reporting and audit packs
- Meetings, governance, and owner workflows
Frequently asked
Common questions before you try it
Does Michigan law require a professional reserve study for condo associations?
Can a Michigan condo board borrow from reserves to cover operating shortfalls?
What happens if a Michigan HOA fails to maintain adequate reserves?
How does Fannie Mae's reserve requirement interact with Michigan's 10% minimum?
Ready to run the full board workflow in one system?
Start Free TrialSources and Review Notes
Gavelhouse cites the sources used for this page and records the last review date for each reference.
- Foundation for Community Association Research
Foundation for Community Association Research