General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFlorida Condo owners stuck with homes no one will buy as they wake up to grim repercussions of new laws
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/real-estate/article-15717685/florida-condo-owners-laws-market-collapse.htmlFlorida condo owners are waking up to a brutal new reality: their homes are becoming virtually worthless.
Desperate sellers all over the Sunshine State are slashing prices to as little as $10,000 - and still failing to find buyers.
The property problem across the state has been triggered by a tough new safety law brought in after the 2021 deadly Surfside condominium collapse that killed 98 people, forcing aging buildings to undergo inspections and fund massive repairs.
Florida-based real estate expert Katrin Pfitzenreiter told the Daily Mail that, for many owners, this has meant repair bills in excess of $100,000, soaring HOA fees - which averaged $135 per month in 2025 - and a market flooded with listings no one wants.
Worse still, hundreds of buildings have effectively been blacklisted by mortgage giants, meaning buyers can't even secure loans to purchase them.
The scale of the crisis is enormous.
More than half of Florida's condo stock is now over 30 years old, placing millions of units under stricter post-Surfside regulations. And in some cases, prices appear to have collapsed
RockRaven
(19,549 posts)then maybe that is a sign.
What's the alternative? Continuing free lunch for some, served with a side of negligent homicide? I will pass on that, I don't know about everyone else.
SWBTATTReg
(26,312 posts)PeaceWave
(3,615 posts)$135 per month isn't all that much. Here in California, I've heard of much, much higher HOA fees.
IronLionZion
(51,411 posts)so it looks like a typo.
Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)John1956PA
(5,001 posts)As an aside, I will mention that, back in 2010, property owners in locations such as Palm Coast (a city on the East Coast of Florida, about eighty miles northeast of Orlando) walked away from their mortgages and their properties. Squatters took over the abandoned residential properties until the recovering market eventually caused them to be ousted.
The upper margin of the middle class Florida real estate market has seen its share of upheavals in the past twenty years.
Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)Walking away from a property.
And not paying a mortgage.
I would hate to buy property in such an unstable location.
But it does sound like property can be bought on the cheap.
John1956PA
(5,001 posts)In the early part of 2010, her biggest worry was that there were so many vacant homes and squatters in Palm Coast that she did not feel safe. Fortunately, the real estate market and the economy in general improved by the end of 2010. Her investment more than doubled in value.
Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)She had to be able to sustain a possible big loss.
In the event the value kept plummeting.
And yes it was not a safe living situation for a while.
John1956PA
(5,001 posts)Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)IronLionZion
(51,411 posts)plenty of people had sky-high mortgages, lost their jobs, and just walked away. They took a loss and hit to their credit scores and ability to secure financing in future.
Corporations like private equity firms bought up plenty of cheap real estate back then and some still hold them today in some markets. They charge high rents.
Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)Thanks for the info!
enid602
(9,722 posts)But it might be a good squatter opportunity. I think I can rent out my paid for home in PHX for about $3200 per month, per Zillow. With Social Security, I could live nicely squatting in a waterfront condo in FL.
Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)And you have to live with other squatters while you wait for the sheriff.
Rents are crazy aren't they.
(As a side note have you heard anything local about the Nancy Guthrie case?)
enid602
(9,722 posts)No news.
Irish_Dem
(81,833 posts)No one is hearing anything back channel either it appears.
GiqueCee
(4,444 posts)... because they don't do anything for anyone; they just demand fees from residents for the privilege of being told what they cannot do, and the board members pay themselves a tidy sum to act like little Hitlers.
marybourg
(13,649 posts)rather than have a bunch of commies run their own building or a group of little homes by themselves.
Some people seem to miss the fact that there is no themin a condo. It is only you and your fellow owners. If something is being done wrongly, it is you and your fellow condo owners who are doing it wrongly. So instead of a landlord charging too much, you and your fellow condo owners are charging yourselves too little. Only too human. But not evil.
And board members receive no pay for being on the board . Any condo owner can themselves run for board positions. And should do so!
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,496 posts)GiqueCee
(4,444 posts)... as he told it to me. He did not hold the board in high esteem, and neither did a number of his neighbors. His was not the only horror story I've heard over the years.
We live in a very small rural village, and 20-odd years ago a newcomer who was welcomed with casseroles and whatnot quickly tried to establish a homeowners association. He was told in no uncertain terms that we all had gotten along fine without one for years, so forget it. Then he got belligerent. BIG mistake. He was gone in less than a year.
I can understand that it's a bit different when people are living cheek-by-jowl in an apartment complex, but there are way too many tales of woe where a certain kind of personality tries to lord it over everyone else, thus engendering a lot of animosity.
marybourg
(13,649 posts)every year or two, and can be thrown out if they are seen as too much one thing or another. The problem is that most people are unwilling to take on the burdens and responsibilities of board membership themselves, preferring to stay home and watch TV and bitch about the people usually those who need the ego strokes who do put themselves forward to stand for the board. All just ordinary human behavior.
And Homeowners Associations rarely come about through someone moving into a community of individual home owners and organizing them like a union. Homeowner Associations are created by the builder and developer. People may hate and resent their Homeowners Associations, but they hate and resent them less than they hate and resent their neighbors who prop cars up on cement blocks and let weeds and bicycles and wheelbarrows grow in their front yards. If that were not the case developers would not bother setting up homeowners associations, and would just let the prospective buyers deal with the results on their own.
Hassin Bin Sober
(27,473 posts)There is a huge difference between condo HOAs - which are absolutely necessary when you share walls, roofs, and infrastructure - and single family neighborhood HOAs.
I personally wouldnt live in a neighborhood HOA but I understand how some people might prefer an HOA.
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,496 posts)Grounds maintenance
EX500rider
(12,633 posts)BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,496 posts)jmowreader
(53,271 posts)For my $540 per year I DON'T have to help cut the grass in the common areas...and they pretty much leave you alone.
Aristus
(72,314 posts)You couldnt pay me to live in a pestilential hellhole like Florida.
PCB66
(132 posts)Until Disney moved in. Now it is a disaster.
Too many people, too little water and too congested.
I'm 5th generation Floridian. If it wasn't for having deep roots and being elderly I would move out.
lostnfound
(17,553 posts)would know that you are right about the paradise part.
I loved the state when as a young person I realized that even poor people could have a high quality of life there back in the 1970s.
You can blame Disney but Id also blame the shift from decades of fine democratic governors like Askew and Graham replaced with hucksters and losers like Rick Scott and Ron DeSantis.
Lochloosa
(16,758 posts)Florida used to be fun 😁
lostnfound
(17,553 posts)paleotn
(22,413 posts)Ron DeSantis. Homeowners insurance through the roof, if you can even get it. Traffic gridlock. General unaffordability. What's not to like?
And yet, people continue to pile onto that sandbar. Similarly, I wonder why people in the millions would pile into what's essentially the greater Sonoran Desert, i.e., Phoenix. Humans are a strange species.
EX500rider
(12,633 posts)
And December, OMG! Shoveling all that sunshine!

jmowreader
(53,271 posts)I love the Florida Fish and Game regulation on fishing for Oscar - a very large cichlid often kept as an aquarium pet until people realize how big they get and how hard they are on your filters...
No minimum size limit. No bag limit. No closed season. It's illegal to practice catch-and-release fishing with Oscars. They WANT you to catch as many as you possibly can and eat them because they don't breed like rabbits - rabbits are celibate compared to these damned things - and they'll very quickly strip a body of water of any other fish in there.
not fooled
(6,719 posts)Manatees.
EX500rider
(12,633 posts)
Florida manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris) are large, herbivorous marine mammals found in shallow coastal waters, rivers, and springs
Aristus
(72,314 posts)Give me cloudy Pacific Northwest skies any day.
EX500rider
(12,633 posts)JBTaurus83
(1,543 posts)About condo buildings. If there arent strong laws mandating that they maintain safety, its only human nature that people will put off raising their HOA fees. Americans do not live within their means.
Scrivener7
(59,784 posts)laws about maintenance and regular inspections of systems.
SWBTATTReg
(26,312 posts)the sellers of course want their money for selling their properties and the banks, insurers, etc. all want their fees too. Someone in this whole mess (perhaps the sellers, covering up the whole mess until they can pawn off their defective properties?) should pay. The state, is kind of worthless, coming after the fact when all is said and done w/, and left a whole of want of be sellers holding a very expensive, unsellable property. And their insurance fund that the state has is running fast out of resources if it isn't already.
And the state will still get its property taxes, the insurers will still get their insurance fees, and the original sellers will walk away free from the mess to being w/...did they know what was going to happen?
At one time, it was a dream of mine to buy a condo in FL. God, by all that is mighty and good, no more. I'll never buy another condo anywhere else in ANY state for that matter.
I guess to be really safe, just rent very temporarily a place in FL, don't buy (FL is not the only place either, I say this for did some of those escaping the FL mess escape w/ their mess and are trying to sell bad properties elsewhere).
Random Boomer
(4,412 posts)These structures won't last without constant maintenance. They are made of concrete and steel, with elevators and complex plumbing and ductwork. They are essentially commercial buildings, sold as residences. They need expert management and full-time maintenance teams, with routine inspections to spot any problems. Businesses pay for that service; it's a known cost factor in their expense calculations. Residential property owners often don't have the awareness or the expertise to realize the necessity of this system or the willingness to bear the cost.
JI7
(93,740 posts)and maintenance in general that should have been done over the years ?
I can't figure out what the issue is here . Of course things will be more expensive but is it a huge difference and don't people want their homes to be safe ?
I know people usually bought in Florida becsuse it was cheaper so it could be that.
not fooled
(6,719 posts)Don't be responsible, cut taxes and live like there's no tomorrow, don't fund infrastructure and necessary upkeep, and just hope you die before it all falls apart.
Looks like the game of musical chairs just stopped for the owners of those condos.
Wonder Why
(7,130 posts)raccoon
(32,425 posts)Wonder Why
(7,130 posts)Sorry. P
pfitz59
(12,788 posts)meant cutting corners and fighting zoning laws. Anyone with a working brain new disaster was imminent.
Hey Joe
(688 posts)of there over thirty years ago when I could no longer live with the rampant overdevelopment,
I am so grateful to be away from there.
I could see since the late seventies, the building of condominiums increased and the planning was less thought out and soon quality of construction fell as well.
Its your typical boom/bust cycle with greed
(of course!) being the main driver.
Had some great times there as a kid though!
slightlv
(7,828 posts)I always wanted to, but never had the chanced. Wouldn't do it now if someone paid me. I don't think it's going to be a problem for much longer, tho. Climate change is coming at us fast and furious. I do believe it's all going to be underwater before too much longer. While I feel for the Democrats and the normal people trying to live there, I hope against all hope the first thing that goes underwater is that pest infested hellhole mar a lago!
The Blue Flower
(6,534 posts)we lived on the outskirts of Winter Park, a suburb of Orlando. My dad was in construction. It was apparent that after Disney came, there was virtually no urban planning. Development was chaotic and unregulated. It was a great place to grow up. I got a very good public education, for the most part. But I left in 67 and I've no desire to go back, even for high school reunions.
flvegan
(66,370 posts)That article is typical Dailymail bullshit though. Sprinkling of facts, lots of hyperbole, fake "examples."
mitch96
(15,838 posts)and the price isn't crazy high, then sell quick...YMMV
m
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,496 posts)Danmel
(5,791 posts)One lived there, the other was visiting to take care of their ailing father. Both were physicians, one a cardiologist in Florida, the other an orthopedic surgeon at a VA facility in Alabama.
It was devastating.
Alice Kramden
(2,954 posts)My heart goes out to those poor parents
mountain grammy
(29,087 posts)BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,496 posts)JoseBalow
(9,574 posts)GiqueCee
(4,444 posts)... mostly swamp to begin with, was it not? Mother Nature always has the last word in such matters.
mountain grammy
(29,087 posts)Susan Calvin
(2,449 posts)flashman13
(2,455 posts)Those remaining will either be the wealthy who couldn't care less about the cost of living, and those peons that don't have enough money to buy gas to leave the state. Even Disney World will go belly up because people simply won't be able to afford the cost tickets, accommodations, and food.
I grew up in south FL in the 50s and 60s. It was a nice place then. When I graduated from high school ( I was very lucky because at that time Miami-Dade county had what was recognized as one of the best educational systems in the country. The Repugs destroyed all that.), I left and never looked back.
madville
(7,856 posts)Banks wouldnt finance most FL condos 15 years ago after the 2008 crash. They usually require them to meet FHA lending guidelines which something like over 90% of condos in Florida dont. The ones that do are typically new construction.
Norrrm
(5,249 posts)How The Reagan Revolution Collapsed America & the Florida Condo
https://hartmannreport.com/p/how-the-reagan-revolution-collapsed
condo fees
https://hartmannreport.com/p/how-the-reagan-revolution-collapsed
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https://www.democraticunderground.com/100215598501
built deliberately short-changing long-term maintenance for quick profits.