Tennessee HOA Reserve Fund Requirements (2026)
Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 66-27-101 et seq. (Tennessee Horizontal Property Act)
No
Governed by your CC&Rs and bylaws
None
No statutory minimum — governing documents control reserve obligations
No
No state-mandated reserve disclosure; requirements come from your governing documents
No
No legislative change after Surfside
- No state law requires a reserve study or minimum funding level
- Reserve obligations are determined entirely by your CC&Rs and bylaws
- Boards have a fiduciary duty to maintain common elements in good repair
- Fannie Mae and FHA guidelines apply regardless of state law
- Document reserve fund decisions in meeting minutes
No state-mandated reserve disclosure; requirements come from your governing documents
Fannie Mae requires HOA to allocate at least 10% of assessments to reserves or demonstrate a 10% funding ratio. FHA requires similar. Low reserve funding can block unit sales and refinancing.
Fannie Mae requirement
Minimum 10% of assessments allocated to reserves, or a demonstrated 10% funding ratio. Associations below this threshold may face loan-level pricing adjustments or deal failure.
FHA requirement
Similar 10% minimum allocation. FHA-backed financing unavailable for units in HOAs that do not meet the threshold, reducing the buyer pool and depressing values.
- Commission a reserve study even without a legal mandate — lenders check during unit sales
- Aim for 70%+ funded status to avoid Fannie Mae and FHA flags
- Document all reserve fund decisions in board meeting minutes
- Review reserve contributions annually
Related tools for Tennessee HOA boards
Managing reserves for a Tennessee HOA? LotWize tracks your reserve contributions automatically.
LotWize helps self-managed HOA boards stay on top of reserve contributions, annual budget preparation, and best-practice reserve planning — without hiring a property management company.
Start 14-Day Free TrialThis page provides general legal information about Tennessee HOA reserve requirements only — not legal advice. Reserve laws vary by community type (planned community vs. condominium) and change frequently. Always consult a licensed Tennessee HOA attorney and review your governing documents for advice specific to your situation. Statute citations accurate as of 2026.