For decades, many of Oregon’s smaller condominium associations have operated on what we call a “handshake and a prayer.” To keep monthly dues low, boards often skip formal meetings, leave minutes untracked, and push off reserve studies for “someday.”

If your association operates this way, you might think you’re saving everyone money and hassle. But as of 2026, the mortgage market has hit the “reset” button. New federal mandates from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are turning unmanaged associations into “non-warrantable” projects. In short: If your association isn’t compliant, your units may become impossible to sell to anyone who needs a loan.
1. The Retirement of the “Fast-Track” Sale
Historically, buyers with large down payments (25%+) could use a “Limited Review,” which allowed lenders to skip the association’s books and focus only on the buyer’s credit.
The Deadline: Starting August 3, 2026, the Limited Review is being retired for established projects. From that day forward, almost every buyer will trigger a Full Review. Lenders will demand two years of meeting minutes, a current budget, and proof of structural health. Without these records, a neighbor’s sale will stall indefinitely in escrow. (see Lender letter).
2. The 15% Reserve Mandate
While Oregon law (ORS 100.175) has long required reserve accounts, many small associations have treated them as optional. Now, the banks are becoming the enforcers.
The Deadline: Starting January 4, 2027, associations must contribute at least 15% of their annual budget to reserves. The only way to bypass this 15% rule is to have a professional reserve study (conducted within the last three years) proving a lower amount is sufficient. Furthermore, “Baseline Funding”—keeping just enough to stay above $0—is no longer allowed. You must fund at the “highest recommended level” to remain eligible for financing.
3. The New Liability of Silence
Lenders now use a Structural Integrity Addendum that asks the Board directly: “Are you aware of any deferred maintenance or structural deficiencies?” In the past, some boards simply chose “not to look” at aging siding or soft decks to avoid raising assessments.
Today, signing that form without doing your due diligence isn’t just a management risk; it can be flagged as mortgage fraud. If a lender sees signs of decay, they will deny the loan until the work is 100% complete and documented.
4. The Insurance “Gap” Trap
To fight skyrocketing premiums, many associations have raised their deductibles to $100k or more.
The Deadline: As of July 1, 2026, there is a new maximum deductible of $50,000 per unit for master policies. If your association’s deductible is higher, your owners must carry individual HO-6 policies that specifically cover that gap. If they don’t, the building becomes ineligible for conventional financing.
The Bottom Line: Professionalism is the Best Protection
Being a “small, quiet association” has many benefits, but it no longer exempts a community from the realities of the mortgage market. By embracing these updates—holding annual meetings, refreshing your reserve study (or actually getting a study done), and documenting your maintenance—you are doing more than just staying compliant.
By building a foundation of transparency, you’re doing more than just checking a box for a lender. You are actively protecting every owner’s equity and ensuring your association stays ‘loan-ready’ in a changing world.
Most importantly, proactive planning keeps monthly assessments in a healthy, predictable range—drastically reducing the likelihood of those ‘special assessment’ surprises that can strain a neighbor’s budget.
Does your board need a “Baseline Reset” to get compliant with these 2026 changes? Let’s discuss how to build a roadmap (a clear plan) that protects your property value without the corporate headache.
