The real estate market in Connecticut is moving fast, and Jill Taylor is seeing it firsthand. “I just had two clients reach out to me this week about seeing a house. One sold in 48 hou...
Phoenix Condos Face Sales Challenges Due to HOA Fee Confusion




The Phoenix condo market faces an unexpected hurdle: buyer confusion over HOA fees is causing many to overlook potentially good deals, according to veteran real estate agent Chris Dunham of Brokers Hub Realty, who argues that a deeper analysis often reveals these fees offer better value than commonly assumed.
“We’re having a lot of struggle getting condos sold,” Dunham says. “A lot of people aren’t liking the higher HOA fees.” However, he argues this resistance often stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of what these fees cover and how they compare to single-family home expenses.
The Hidden Economics of HOA Fees
While buyers might balk at a $2,000 monthly HOA fee on a $700,000 condo, Dunham says this reaction overlooks the comprehensive nature of these payments. “Those fees typically cover all the costs associated with living, the electrical, water, sewer, garbage, you have a fitness center, you have a swimming pool, the exterior maintenance and all that kind of stuff,” he explains.
When compared to itemized expenses for single-family homes, the math often tells a different story. “If you’re living in a house, you’re going to pay separate for gas and separate for water, trash and sewer, separate for electric. You’re going to have a gym membership, you’re going to have to maintain your pool, you’re going to have to have a landscaper,” Dunham notes. “Whereas in a high-rise community, all that stuff’s rolled into one payment, and mathematically, it’s often the same or a little bit less.”
The Financing Challenge
Despite the potential long-term value, HOA fees create immediate challenges in the lending process. “The lenders have to count the HOA fee towards the debt,” Dunham explains, even though these fees replace multiple separate expenses that wouldn’t be counted the same way for single-family homes.
This accounting quirk can affect buyers’ debt-to-income ratios and lending qualifications, even when their actual monthly expenses might be similar or lower than a comparable single-family home. “It still comes as a ding to the buyer, because they have to assume that cost,” Dunham says.
Market Impact
The combination of misunderstood costs and financing challenges has significantly affected the Phoenix condo market. “If I did 50 deals a year, because that was one of my niches, I would probably do 12, you know, I’d say eight to 12 high-rise condos per year as well,” Dunham recalls of previous years.
Additional factors compound these challenges. “There’s a lot of unwarrantable buildings right now,” Dunham explains. “When COVID hit, a lot of them stopped. They didn’t continue moving forward with the warrantability paperwork, so then whenever I was showing a condo, now it’s the first thing I asked my lender, ‘Hey, is this warrantable? Can they finance?'”
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
Every month we conduct hundreds of interviews with
active market practitioners - thousands to date.
Similar Articles
Explore similar articles from Our Team of Experts.




Scott Spelker challenges conventional wisdom about seasonal real estate timing in New Jersey’s competitive suburban markets The real estate industry operates on deeply ingrained season...


While headlines focus on rising home prices and the struggle for local buyers, veteran real estate professional Elizabeth Hume offers a different perspective on Boise’s housing market. The...


A new pattern is taking hold in Jersey Shore real estate: sellers are increasingly willing to walk away from deals during the inspection period, confident that backup buyers are ready to ste...


Drive through almost any downtown in America right now, and you’ll spot them — big office buildings with dark windows, empty parking garages, and “For Lease” signs that h...

