# Florida HOA and Condo Resale: Your Cancellation Window (2026)

> Florida gives a buyer a statutory right to cancel after receiving the association documents, and the length depends on the property type. For a home in a community with mandatory homeowners association membership, Florida Statutes 720.401 makes the contract voidable by written notice within 3 days after you receive the disclosure summary, or before closing, whichever comes first; the statute says this right cannot be waived and ends at closing. For the resale of a condominium unit, Florida Statutes 718.503 makes the contract voidable for 7 days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after you sign and receive the declaration, bylaws, rules, the most recent annual financial statement and budget, and the frequently asked questions document. Section 720.401 does not apply to condos, so it is one window or the other, not both. The clock starts when you have both signed and received the documents, which is why you want to read them the day they arrive.

_Source: https://hoanotes.com/hoa/florida/resale-cancellation-window/ | Last reviewed 2026-06-10_

## Homeowners association: the 3-day window (720.401)

If you are buying a home in a community with mandatory HOA membership, Florida Statutes 720.401 requires the seller to give you a disclosure summary before you sign. If you did not get it first, your contract is voidable by delivering written notice within 3 days after you receive the disclosure summary, or before closing, whichever comes first. The statute is blunt about how strong this right is: any purported waiver of it has no effect. It does end once you close.

The disclosure summary is a short, standardized form. It tells you that you have to join the association, that assessments are mandatory, and that the obligations can change. It is the trigger for your cancellation window, not a substitute for the full governing documents and finances you still need to read.

## Condominium resale: the 7-business-day window (718.503)

A condominium resale runs on a different and longer clock. Under Florida Statutes 718.503, the resale of a unit is voidable for 7 days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after you sign and receive the condo documents: the declaration, the articles and bylaws, the rules, the most recent annual financial statement and budget, and the frequently asked questions and answers document. Because weekends and holidays do not count, 7 business days is closer to a week and a half on the calendar.

This is the resale window, for buying from an existing owner. A purchase directly from a developer carries a separate, longer cancellation period under the same statute, which is not what most buyers are dealing with.

## What to read before the window closes

However long your window is, spend it on the documents that carry the money risk:

- The most recent annual financial statement and budget, for the size of the operating budget and any deficit.
- The reserve schedule and any reserve study, since Florida condos have faced large special assessments for structural reserves.
- Any approved or pending special assessment, which transfers to you at closing.
- The frequently asked questions document, for the assessment amount and known obligations stated in plain terms.

## Why this matters to your offer

Your cancellation window is the one stretch of the deal where you can walk away over what the association documents say, without losing your deposit. Florida condos in particular have seen steep special assessments for structural and reserve work, and that risk sits in the financial statements and the reserve schedule you receive at the start of the window.

An HOA Notes brief reads the full set the day it arrives, flags the reserve, the budget, the special assessments, and the rules that affect you, and cites the page behind every finding, so you can use the window to decide instead of to read.

## What the statute says

**Florida Statutes section 720.401** (HOA disclosure cancellation). A prospective parcel buyer in a community with mandatory HOA membership must receive a disclosure summary before signing, and may void the contract by written notice within 3 days after receiving the summary or before closing, whichever comes first; this right cannot be waived and ends at closing. The seller may satisfy the requirement by delivering the statutory disclosure summary; this cancellation right does not apply to associations regulated as condominiums under chapter 718.

## Florida resale cancellation window: common questions

### How long do I have to cancel a Florida HOA home purchase?

Under Florida Statutes 720.401, the contract is voidable by written notice within 3 days after you receive the HOA disclosure summary, or before closing, whichever comes first. The right cannot be waived and ends at closing.

### How long is the cancellation window on a Florida condo resale?

Under Florida Statutes 718.503, a condo resale is voidable for 7 days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after you sign and receive the condo documents, including the most recent financial statement, budget, and FAQ document.

### Does the Florida HOA 3-day window apply to condos?

No. Section 720.401 states it does not apply to associations regulated as condominiums under chapter 718. A condo resale runs on the 7-business-day window in section 718.503 instead.

### What starts the Florida cancellation clock?

Receiving the required documents and, for a condo resale, signing the contract. Because delivery starts the clock, reading the documents the day they arrive gives you the most of your window to decide.

## Sources (verified 2026-06-10)

1. Florida Statutes section 720.401 (HOA disclosure summary; contract cancellation), The Florida Senate. Verified 2026-06-10. https://www.flsenate.gov/Laws/Statutes/2025/720.401
2. Florida Statutes section 718.503 (developer and nondeveloper disclosure; voidability), The Florida Senate. Verified 2026-06-10. https://www.flsenate.gov/Laws/Statutes/2025/718.503
3. Florida Statutes 720.401, prospective purchaser disclosure and cancellation, LawServer. Verified 2026-06-10. https://www.lawserver.com/law/state/florida/statutes/florida_statutes_720-401

HOA Notes is not a law firm and this is not legal advice.