A healthy reserve fund is one of the most important indicators of a well-managed co-op or condo. Yet many buildings struggle with how much to save, where to invest, and how to communicate reserve status to shareholders. This guide covers evidence-based best practices for building and maintaining adequate reserves.
Why Reserve Funds Matter
Reserve funds protect your building from financial emergencies and ensure you can pay for major repairs and capital improvements without imposing sudden, large assessments on shareholders. Buildings with adequate reserves tend to have higher property values and easier mortgage approvals for buyers. Lenders and prospective purchasers routinely review reserve levels when evaluating a building.
How Much Should You Have?
There is no single universal percentage that fits every building. Industry practice often measures reserve strength using a "percent funded" metric: current reserves compared to a "fully funded" balance (the amount needed based on component deterioration over time). General guidelines: 0–30% funded is considered weak with high risk of special assessments; 30–70% funded is fair with moderate risk; 70–100% funded is strong with low risk of special assessments. Rather than chasing an arbitrary percentage, many experts recommend a "threshold funding" approach—maintaining stable, consistent reserve contributions that cover capital expenditures over time, which can mean lower annual assessments than aiming for 100% funding.
The Reserve Study Approach
The gold standard is commissioning a professional reserve study. Such studies inventory structural, mechanical, electrical, and plumbing components; estimate remaining useful life and replacement costs; and calculate the funding needed over a typical 20–30 year horizon. Best practice is to have an initial study and then update it within five years and at least every five years thereafter. Studies should identify all major components, useful life, remaining useful life, estimated repair or replacement cost, and the annual reserve contribution needed to stay on track.
Building Your Reserve Fund
Budget contributions — Include a dedicated line item in your annual budget for reserve contributions. A common approach is 5–10% of maintenance or common charge revenue, adjusted to match the output of your reserve study.
Flip tax allocations — Many buildings direct a portion of flip tax revenue to reserves, which can significantly boost savings during active sales periods.
Refinancing proceeds — When refinancing the underlying mortgage, consider directing some proceeds to reserves rather than only reducing maintenance.
Special assessments — When reserves are insufficient for a specific project, targeted assessments can be appropriate if communicated clearly and used sparingly.
Investment Strategies
Reserve funds should be invested conservatively, since you may need access on relatively short notice. Suitable options include money market accounts (FDIC insured, liquid), CDs with laddered maturities (higher yields with staggered access), and Treasury bills (safe, predictable returns). Avoid stocks, long-term bonds, or other volatile investments for reserve funds.
Communicating with Shareholders
Transparency about reserve fund status builds trust. Include reserve balance and contribution rates in annual reports and budget summaries. When proposing increases, explain the reasoning and show the long-term plan. A reserve study is invaluable for demonstrating why funding is necessary and how it protects the building and unit values.
Operating Budget vs. Reserves
Operating budgets typically cover 80–90% of a building's ongoing costs (utilities, staff, insurance, routine maintenance), while capital expenses and reserve contributions make up the remainder. Annual reserve funding should align with the annual deterioration rate of building components as identified in the reserve study. Boards that treat reserves as a fixed annual line item rather than a residual often build healthier balances over time.
Warning Signs
Watch for: frequent special assessments for routine repairs, deferred maintenance due to lack of funds, a reserve balance that has not grown in years, or no formal reserve study or funding plan. Addressing these early reduces the risk of crisis-driven assessments and preserves property values.
Getting Started
If your building lacks a reserve study or a formal funding plan, now is the time to act. Contact your property manager or a qualified reserve study provider to discuss options tailored to your building's size, age, and capital needs. The upfront cost of a reserve study is typically modest compared to the long-term benefit of informed capital planning.