Florida §720.315

Passage of special assessments

Statute:
Florida §720.315 · Chapter 720 (Homeowners' Association Act)
Topic:
Assessments & Finance · Special assessments
Applies to:
HOA associations

Notice for a meeting at which a special assessment will be considered must state purpose and estimated amount.

special assessment; quorum; majority; notice; purpose

📄 Read the official text at flsenate.gov →

How SoShiny helps with Passage of special assessments

SoShiny calculates per-unit assessments automatically from ownership percentages and tracks payment status against every levy. The unit-level ledger is the audit trail your CPA, attorney, and the board need when an owner disputes a charge.

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Frequently asked

What does Florida §720.315 require?
Notice for a meeting at which a special assessment will be considered must state purpose and estimated amount.
Who does Florida §720.315 apply to?
Florida §720.315 applies to HOA associations in Florida.
What happens if our HOA doesn't comply with §720.315?
Non-compliance with Florida Chapter 720 can expose the association and individual board members to civil suit, with most pre-suit disputes required to go through statutory mediation under §720.311. Florida HOAs are not regulated by DBPR — enforcement is private. SoShiny's audit trail and documented workflows are designed to demonstrate good-faith compliance if a dispute escalates.
Where can I read the official text of Florida §720.315?
The official text is published by the Florida Legislature at flsenate.gov. The summary on this page is for plain-English reference only and is not legal advice.
How does SoShiny help with Passage of special assessments?
SoShiny calculates per-unit assessments automatically from ownership percentages and tracks payment status against every levy. The unit-level ledger is the audit trail your CPA, attorney, and the board need when an owner disputes a charge. Learn more →

Not legal advice. This page is a plain-English summary of Florida §720.315 prepared by SoShiny for board members and managers. For binding legal advice or interpretation, consult a Florida-licensed attorney. For the official statutory text, see the link above.

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