This Sunrise condo building lost its windstorm insurance — so buyers can’t get financed [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
After Rich Engels’ mother died earlier this year, Engels decided to sell her condo unit in Sunrise Lakes Phase 4.
He lined up a buyer, but he said the deal fell apart after the lender learned that the condo building had no wind insurance.
Lenders won’t approve mortgage loans on buildings that are not insured with full replacement coverage.
It’s a growing problem as
Engels eventually sold the condo to a buyer who could pay cash. But he says he settled for
“We were planning to put some of the money away for each of the grandkids and give some to our kids,” Engels said. “I had to break my promise. It hurt a lot.”
Construction was underway to replace four roofs while work on another eight is scheduled for next year, he said.
The association kept the funds it would have spent on insurance in its operating account to use to repair any hurricane damage this year, Abramowitz said.
With hurricane season scheduled to end
The association plans to get its windstorm insurance reinstated next year after the remaining roofs are replaced, he said.
‘Master’ insurance costs rise as lenders look closer
About 30% of condo buildings constructed between the late 1960s and 1990s that haven’t replaced their roofs or have other structural issues face difficulties obtaining full-coverage insurance required by lenders, said
State law requires condo associations to use their “best effort” to obtain and maintain “master” policies that cover the exteriors of their buildings, plumbing and electrical systems, and all common areas of the condominium complexes.
Those policies are separate from the individual homeowner policies that unit owners buy to protect the fixtures inside their units, such as bathroom and kitchen fixtures, and the floor, wall and ceiling.
Insurance rates for master policies have increased so much over the past year — from 25% to 70% — that a growing number of condo associations are finding they can’t afford full coverage in the private insurance market, Suarez-Resnick said.
One of her clients,
Instead, the association that runs
Hundreds of condo associations have turned to Citizens in recent months.
The number of condominium complexes that Citizens covers increased by 142% — from 1,696 to 4,109 — between
Meanwhile, the replacement value of the condominiums that Citizens is covering increased by about 338% — from
Weston Property & Casualty Insurance’s failure in
The largest,
Others are Heritage Property & Casualty, Cypress Property & Casualty, and
Some condominiums are forced to purchase from surplus lines carriers, which offer coverage but with high, uncompetitive premiums, she said.
In 2022, the state Legislature barred insurers from denying coverage because of a roof’s age if the roof is less than 15 years old. For roofs older than 15 years, insurers cannot reject coverage because of age if an inspection determines the roof has five or more years of useful life left.
That means condo associations must work quickly to develop plans to replace their roofs if inspections determine they have less than five years left, Suarez-Resnick said.
What’s more common, he said, are condos that cannot afford full replacement coverage for their roofs are settling for actual cash value coverage. Yet,
He’s also seeing wind policies with deductibles over the maximum 5% allowed by
With reduced insurance availability and rising prices, many associations are choosing to remain insured and not worrying about whether
“The last thing you’re thinking about is, ‘What does the mortgage lender think about this?'” he said. “It would behoove associations to have in mind what encourages the sale of condo units — to keep values up.”
Of larger concern to Garcia are new guidelines by
Spawned by the
Records will also be required documenting the status of special assessments, structural or mechanical inspection reports conducted over the past three years, recent repairs, and other documentation such as board meeting minutes, engineer reports, and reserve studies.
Condo buildings can be declared ineligible for financing backed by
A list of ineligible properties are available to lenders and real estate agents, but they are not allowed to share it publicly.
“Prior to September, the mortgage companies would ask about the condition of the building and a general response was good enough,” says
Property managers and associations are still becoming familiar with the process, he said, adding, “Right now, it is chaotic to say the least.”
Reserve study requirement adds pressure on associations
And it comes as associations are figuring out how to comply with new legal requirements for condo buildings three stories or taller to complete Structural Integrity Reserve Studies no later than
The study, currently required only in
The studies will have to identify the remaining useful life of the common areas being inspected and recommend annual reserves that associations must raise to repair or replace the elements.
Effective
The studies will reveal more roofs that have reached the ends of their useful lives, along with other damage requiring immediate repairs to keep buildings insurable.
The costs associated with the required studies, along with costs to make required repairs and the rising cost of insurance threaten to make
“Obviously something has got to give at some point,” he said.
©2023 South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Visit sun-sentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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