In 2026, the number of HOAs nationwide is projected to climb to roughly 377,000, with nearly 80 million Americans living in association-governed communities. That means about one in every three homes is now part of an HOA.
HOAs are no longer a niche; they are a part of mainstream housing infrastructure.
And, when one-third of the country lives under association leadership, expectations change.
As the industry grows, resident standards grow with it. Financial oversight is scrutinized more closely; enforcement decisions are questioned more quickly; and transparency is assumed.
You feel this growth directly on your boardroom table. That’s when the systems you have in place matter more than ever.
Think back to your last budget meeting.
Was it a quick approval? Or did it stretch into a two-hour discussion about insurance increases, vendor contracts, and whether reserves are enough?
Today, boards are navigating:
Ten years ago, you might have adjusted a line item and moved on. Now, homeowners want context. They want transparency. They want to understand why dues are increasing and what long-term plan supports it.
That’s a healthy shift, but it requires stronger financial visibility than many boards are used to.
When you can instantly access reserve balances, historical spending, and multi-year projections, the tone of the conversation changes. It becomes strategic instead of defensive.
In single-family and townhome associations, the health of your reserves reflects the long-term care of the community’s shared infrastructure:
These assets age quietly. Until they don’t.
Replacement costs today are materially different from what they were even a few years ago. Asphalt, concrete, labor, materials, everything has increased. A reserve contribution that once felt conservative may now be insufficient.
Boards today aren’t waiting for urgency. They’re:
Growth doesn’t just increase the scale of communities. It increases the visibility of leadership decisions.
Reserve planning is no longer a “we’ll deal with it later” issue. It’s a reflection of governance maturity.
As your community grows, it's not only the budget that expands; operational complexities do too.
More homeowners typically means:
Each one requires consistency, documentation, and follow-through.
When architectural applications are tracked across email threads or stored in shared folders, it becomes difficult to maintain a clear record. When violations are managed manually, deadlines can be missed, and documentation gaps can create disputes.
As HOA communities grow in number and visibility, governance can’t rely on informal processes. Structured systems like ManageHOA help boards ensure that architectural reviews, violations, and documentation are handled consistently.
Architectural review is one of your most visible governance responsibilities. Homeowners want clarity, fairness, and timely decisions.
Homeowners want to know that:
With BuildingLink’s ManageHOA, architectural review becomes structured rather than informal. Homeowners can review guidelines and submit detailed applications with supporting documents and images through a centralized platform. Committee members can review, discuss, and vote within a documented workflow. Automated notifications keep everyone informed.
The same principle applies to violations.
In larger, more visible communities, enforcement must be consistent and defensible. Parking issues, landscaping concerns, and noise complaints are part of governance. But the way they’re handled shapes homeowner perception.
Structured violation management through ManageHOA allows boards to:
When every step is recorded, enforcement becomes less personal and more procedural.
That protects the association, and it protects you as a board member.
As your community grows and as HOA governance becomes more visible nationwide, your board’s systems should evolve too.
If you’re experiencing:
It may be time to evaluate whether your current processes can support your responsibilities moving forward.
As HOA growth trends continue, boards that rely on disconnected systems often feel overwhelmed.
You may find yourselves asking:
BuildingLink’s ManageHOA brings financial tracking, architectural review workflows, violation management, document storage, and resident communication into one centralized platform.
For you as a board member, that means:
As HOA governance becomes more complex and visible, it’s time to make sure your board is prepared.
Request a personalized demo of ManageHOA and see how your community can be better prepared for what’s ahead.