# Nevada HOA Resale: Your 5-Day Cancellation Window (2026)

> Nevada is one of the states that lets you cancel a home purchase after you read the association documents, and the right comes from a statute, not just your contract. Under NRS 116.4109, the seller of a resale unit has to give you a resale package, and you can cancel the purchase contract by written notice until midnight of the fifth calendar day after you receive it. The contract itself has to say so. Cancellation in that window costs you nothing and your deposit comes back, but the right ends once you take title, so the timing matters. The association has 10 calendar days to hand over the package documents after the owner asks, and the package has to include the CC&Rs, bylaws, rules, the state information statement, a statement of the current assessment and anything unpaid on the unit, the operating budget with a reserve summary, and, as of July 1, 2026, proof of the insurance the association is required to carry. Reading that package the day it arrives is how you get the full five days to weigh it.

_Source: https://hoanotes.com/hoa/nevada/resale-cancellation-window/ | Last reviewed 2026-06-12_

## The 5-day window (NRS 116.4109)

If you are buying an existing home in a Nevada common-interest community, NRS 116.4109 gives you a statutory right to walk away after you see the association's resale package. You cancel by delivering written notice to the seller or the seller's agent, and you have until midnight of the fifth calendar day after you receive the package. These are calendar days, so weekends count. The statute also requires your purchase contract to state this right, which is one reason to read the contract language about it.

Cancellation inside the window is without penalty, and any money you have paid has to be refunded promptly. The one hard limit is closing: once you have accepted conveyance of the unit, the right to cancel under this section is gone. That makes the order of events matter. If the package shows up late, your five days can collide with your closing date, which is when you have the least room to act.

## What the resale package has to contain

The resale package is Nevada's version of the disclosure set, and the law lists what it must include:

- The declaration (CC&Rs), bylaws, and current rules or regulations.
- The information statement required by NRS 116.41095, which explains your basic rights as an owner.
- A statement of the current monthly assessment and any unpaid obligations tied to the unit, the line that can reveal an undisclosed HOA debt.
- The current operating budget and a reserve summary, so you can see whether the association is funded for what it owns.
- As of July 1, 2026, proof of the insurance the association is required to carry under NRS 116.3113, added by Assembly Bill 396.

## Why the assessment line matters in Nevada

Nevada has one of the strongest HOA lien rules in the country. Under NRS 116.3116, an association's lien for unpaid assessments has priority over a first mortgage for an amount equal to nine months of assessments, and an HOA foreclosure on that piece can wipe out the lender's deed of trust. For a buyer, an undisclosed delinquency on the unit is not a small problem. The statement of unpaid obligations in the resale package is where it shows up, which is why the package is worth a careful read in your five days.

## What to read before the window closes

Five calendar days is short. Spend them on the parts of the package that carry the money risk:

- The statement of unpaid assessments on the unit, because of Nevada's nine-month superpriority lien.
- The operating budget and reserve summary, for an underfunded reserve that points to a future special assessment.
- The minutes and any notices, for a special assessment that is already approved or under discussion.
- Starting July 1, 2026, the proof of insurance, to confirm the association actually carries the coverage it is supposed to.

## Why this matters to your offer

Your cancellation window is the one stretch of a Nevada purchase where the association documents alone can get you out, with your deposit intact. After it closes, your options narrow to whatever your contract contingencies still allow. The risks that justify walking, an underfunded reserve, a pending special assessment, an unpaid balance riding a superpriority lien, all sit in the package you receive at the start of the five days.

An HOA Notes brief reads the full resale package the day it arrives, flags the reserve, the budget, the unpaid assessments, and the rules that affect you, and cites the page behind every finding. You spend the window deciding, not reading.

## What the statute says

**Nevada Revised Statutes section 116.4109** (Resale package and 5-day cancellation right). In a resale (any sale that does not require a public offering statement), the unit's owner must furnish the buyer a resale package before the sale, and the buyer may cancel the purchase contract by written notice until midnight of the fifth calendar day after receiving the resale package; the purchase contract must contain a provision stating this right. Cancellation within the window is without penalty and entitles the buyer to a prompt refund of payments made, but the right to cancel ends once the buyer accepts conveyance of the unit. On the owner's written request, the association must furnish the documents for the resale package within 10 calendar days. The resale package must include the declaration, bylaws, rules, and the information statement required by NRS 116.41095; a statement of the monthly assessment and any unpaid obligations owed on the unit; the current operating budget with a reserve summary; and, effective July 1, 2026 under Assembly Bill 396 (2025), proof of the insurance the association is required to carry under NRS 116.3113. The association may charge a reasonable fee based on its actual cost to prepare the resale package and certificate, but not more than $20 to provide the package electronically, and for paper copies not more than 25 cents per page for the first 10 pages and 10 cents per page after that; a resale package remains effective for 90 calendar days; the association is not required to furnish the documents faster than the 10-calendar-day deadline.

## Nevada HOA resale cancellation: common questions

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

Under NRS 116.4109, you can cancel the purchase contract by written notice until midnight of the fifth calendar day after you receive the resale package. They are calendar days, so weekends count, and the right ends once you take title.

### What starts the Nevada cancellation clock?

Receiving the resale package from the seller. The five calendar days run from the date you receive it, which is why reading it the day it arrives gives you the most of your window.

### How fast does the HOA have to provide the resale package?

Within 10 calendar days after the unit's owner or their agent makes a written request, the association must furnish the documents for the package. The package then stays valid for 90 calendar days.

### Does the Nevada cancellation right survive closing?

No. NRS 116.4109 says that once you have accepted conveyance of the unit, you can no longer cancel under this section. The window is before closing only.

## Sources (verified 2026-06-12)

1. Nevada Revised Statutes 116.4109 (Resales of units; resale package; right to cancel), Nevada Legislature. Verified 2026-06-12. https://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-116.html#NRS116Sec4109
2. Assembly Bill 396 (2025), section 9, amending NRS 116.4109 (effective July 1, 2026), Nevada Legislature. Verified 2026-06-12. https://archive.leg.state.nv.us/Session/83rd2025/Bills/AB/AB396_R2.pdf
3. NRS 116.4109, Resales of units (full statutory text), Nevada Public Law. Verified 2026-06-12. https://nevada.public.law/statutes/nrs_116.4109
4. 2025 Legislative Updates (AB396 resale package insurance disclosure), Nevada Real Estate Division. Verified 2026-06-12. https://red.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/rednvgov/Content/CIC/Program_Training/Presentations/2025-Legislative-Updates.pdf

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