# Virginia HOA Budgets and Reserve Studies (2026)

> Under Code of Virginia 55.1-1826, a Virginia HOA board must conduct a reserve study at least once every five years to determine the reserves needed to repair and replace the major capital components, and review that study at least annually to adjust the budget as needed. Before the fiscal year begins, the board has to make the annual budget, or a summary of it, available to all owners. When the reserve study shows reserves are needed, the budget has to disclose the replacement cost and useful life of the capital components, the current reserves and the expected contribution, the method used to estimate reserves, and the recommended reserve amount versus what is actually set aside. One thing the law does not do: it sets no cap on how much annual assessments can increase, so the reserve study and the budget history are where a buyer finds the real risk.

_Source: https://hoanotes.com/hoa/virginia/budget-and-reserves/ | Last reviewed 2026-06-03_

## What the board has to do

The reserve study is the centerpiece. At least every five years the board studies what it will cost to repair and replace the big-ticket shared components, and at least once a year it reviews that study and adjusts the budget if needed. Before the fiscal year starts, owners get the budget or a summary, so nobody is surprised by the number.

When reserves are needed, the disclosure gets specific. The budget has to show the replacement cost and remaining life of the capital components, the cash currently reserved and the planned contribution, the method used to estimate the reserves, and the gap between what the study recommends and what is actually banked. That last number, the recommended versus actual reserve, is the single most useful line for a buyer.

## There is no cap on increases

Virginia does not cap annual assessment increases. Any limit lives in the governing documents, not the statute, so a board with thin reserves and aging components can raise dues or levy a special assessment without a state-law ceiling in the way. The board can meet a shortfall through reserves, additional assessments, or borrowing, at its discretion.

That makes the reserve study the thing to read. A community that is underfunded against its own study is signaling a future increase or a special assessment, and no statute will soften it.

## What to check in the disclosure packet

Read these together before you make an offer:

- The most recent reserve study, and the gap between recommended and actual reserves.
- Whether the study is current, since it must be done at least every five years.
- The last few annual budgets to see how fast dues have risen.
- Any special assessment approved or discussed, and board minutes about big upcoming repairs.

## Why this matters to your offer

Your dues can rise without a statutory ceiling, so the protection that matters is reading the reserve study and the budget before you buy. An underfunded community is a future cost, whether it arrives as a dues increase or a special assessment.

An HOA Notes brief reads the reserve study, the budgets, and the minutes together, flags a community heading toward a steep increase or a special assessment, and cites the page behind each finding.

## What the statute says

**Virginia Code section 55.1-1826** (Budget disclosure and reserve study). Before each fiscal year commences, the board must make available to all lot or unit owners either the full annual budget or a summary; the board must conduct a reserve study at least once every five years and review it annually; when reserves are indicated as necessary, the budget must include current replacement cost and useful life estimates for capital components, accumulated cash reserves, procedures used for estimation, and recommended versus current reserve amounts. The board may exercise discretion in meeting capital needs through reserves, additional assessments, or borrowing; it may approve budgets by board action without a member vote unless the declaration requires a member vote; Virginia has no statutory cap on annual assessment increases.

## Virginia HOA budgets and reserves: common questions

### How often must a Virginia HOA do a reserve study?

At least once every five years, with an annual review to adjust the budget and assessments as needed under Code of Virginia 55.1-1826.

### Is there a cap on Virginia HOA dues increases?

No. Virginia sets no statutory cap on annual assessment increases. Any cap exists only in the governing documents.

### What does the budget have to disclose?

When reserves are needed, the replacement cost and useful life of capital components, current reserves and the expected contribution, the estimation method, and recommended versus actual reserves.

### Do owners get to see the budget?

Yes. The board must make the annual budget or a summary available to all owners before the fiscal year begins.

## Sources (verified 2026-06-03)

1. Code of Virginia section 55.1-1826 (annual budget; reserve study), Virginia General Assembly. Verified 2026-06-03. https://law.lis.virginia.gov/vacode/title55.1/chapter18/section55.1-1826/
2. Code of Virginia section 55.1-1826 (2024), Justia. Verified 2026-06-03. https://law.justia.com/codes/virginia/title-55-1/chapter-18/section-55-1-1826/
3. Virginia reserve study requirements, PropFusion. Verified 2026-06-03. https://www.propfusion.com/law-guide/virginia-reserve-study-requirements

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