TLDR
Caliber Software (Caliber HOA) is a full-stack accounting and community management platform built for professional property management companies. Strong general ledger, owner ledgers, reserve fund reporting, and a management-company portal are its core strengths. The mismatch for self-managed boards is fundamental: Caliber is priced, scoped, and supported for management firms managing portfolios of associations, not for volunteer treasurers running a single community. BoardStack was built from the other direction -- compliance-first, with fund separation enforced at the database layer, flat pricing at $20-$99/mo, and no assumption of accounting expertise.
Quick Verdict
Caliber Software (Caliber HOA) is a full-stack accounting and community management platform built for professional property management companies. Strong general ledger, owner ledgers, reserve fund reporting, and a management-company portal are its core strengths. The mismatch for self-managed boards is fundamental: Caliber is priced, scoped, and supported for management firms managing portfolios of associations, not for volunteer treasurers running a single community. BoardStack was built from the other direction -- compliance-first, with fund separation enforced at the database layer, flat pricing at $20-$99/mo, and no assumption of accounting expertise.
| Feature | Caliber Software | BoardStack |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | Quote-based (management company focused, per-unit or per-door pricing) | $20–$99/mo |
| Setup fee | Varies | $0 |
| Reserve fund compliance | No | Built-in, state-specific |
| Fund accounting | No reserve separation | True fund isolation |
| Owner portal | Limited | Full self-service |
| Built for | Professional management | Volunteer boards |
BoardStack offers reserve fund compliance and true fund accounting at $20–$99/mo with zero setup fees, vs. Caliber Software at Quote-based (management company focused, per-unit or per-door pricing).
What Caliber Software does well
Caliber Software has been in the HOA and condo association management space long enough to build a mature accounting engine. The general ledger supports true accrual accounting with multi-fund structure, which means operating funds, reserve funds, and special assessment funds can be tracked as separate accounts with their own trial balances and audit trails. Per-owner ledgers track assessment history, payment records, and delinquency status at the unit level.
Reserve fund reporting is a genuine strength. Caliber supports component tracking — the individual line items from a reserve study (roof replacement, HVAC, parking lot, elevator) — with remaining useful life estimates and funding projections. For a professional management company managing dozens of associations, this level of reserve reporting detail helps demonstrate fiduciary responsibility to client boards and auditors.
The integrated work order and vendor management system connects maintenance requests to accounting entries, so capital expenditures from reserves are traceable from the work order through to the general ledger. Management company portals allow staff to switch between client association accounts without re-authenticating.
Where the fit breaks down for self-managed boards
Caliber’s strengths are built for the management company use case, not the self-managed volunteer board use case. This is not a flaw in the product — it is a design choice. But the mismatch matters.
Pricing is built for portfolios. Caliber does not publish rates. Every evaluation starts with a sales conversation and ends with a quote based on units under management across a firm’s portfolio. A self-managed volunteer treasurer cannot sign up online, see what it costs, or start a free trial. The pricing model assumes you are a management company spreading cost per-unit across many communities.
The interface assumes accounting staff. Multi-fund accrual accounting is powerful but requires understanding of accounting principles to configure correctly. The platform does not guide a volunteer treasurer through fund setup or compliance requirements. It assumes the user knows what a chart of accounts looks like and how to set up a fund structure.
Fund separation is configuration-dependent. Caliber supports the accounting structures needed to keep operating and reserve funds separate, but this depends on how the platform is configured during implementation. A misconfigured chart of accounts can result in commingling just as easily as QuickBooks can. The platform does not enforce separation by default.
No self-service onboarding. Getting started with Caliber requires going through their sales process, getting a quote, and completing implementation. For a volunteer board that wants to switch tools and get running in a weekend, this is a significant barrier.
How BoardStack approaches this
We built BoardStack for the board that Caliber’s sales team will route to “this might not be the right fit for you.” Self-managed communities up to 500 units where a volunteer treasurer handles the finances.
The core design decision we made differently from Caliber: fund separation is enforced at the database layer. The application will not allow a transaction to commingle operating and reserve funds. This is not a configuration option or a best practice recommendation — it is a system constraint. State statutes in California (Civil Code 5510), Florida (Chapter 720), and other states require separate accounting for reserve funds. We built that requirement into the data model so the board cannot accidentally violate it.
Reserve study target tracking is built for how volunteer boards actually use reserve studies: upload the study once per year, enter the targets, and track actual balances against them over time. State-specific compliance alerts notify the board when their reserve funding level drops below statutory thresholds.
Flat pricing: $20/mo for communities up to 50 units, $49/mo for 51-200 units, $99/mo for 201-500 units. No per-unit fees, no portfolio pricing, no quote required. A 30-day free trial with no credit card.
Who should consider switching
If your community has a professional management company that already uses Caliber, the platform serves that relationship well. If you are self-managed and looked at Caliber because you wanted serious accounting software but got stuck at the sales conversation or the pricing model, that friction is telling you something about the product fit.
The question for a self-managed board is not whether Caliber has better accounting depth — it does, for the use cases it was built for. The question is whether your board needs portfolio-level reserve reporting and accrual accounting managed by accounting staff, or whether you need fund separation you cannot accidentally violate, reserve compliance tracking, and software your volunteer treasurer can run without training. Those are different tools for different jobs.
BoardStack starts at $20/mo for communities up to 50 units. 30-day free trial, no credit card required.
PROS & CONS
Caliber Software
Pros
- Mature general ledger with true accrual accounting and multi-fund support
- Per-owner ledgers with full payment history and assessment tracking
- Reserve fund reporting with component tracking and funding projections
- Integrated work order management and vendor tracking
- Management company portal for multi-association portfolio oversight
Cons
- Quote-based pricing built for management company portfolios, not single boards
- Interface assumes accounting staff, not volunteer board members
- No self-service path for a single self-managed community to get started
- Onboarding requires implementation support typical of enterprise software
PROS & CONS
BoardStack
Pros
- Fund separation enforced at the database layer -- operating and reserve accounts cannot be commingled
- Flat $20-$99/mo pricing with no per-unit fees for communities up to 500 units
- State-specific reserve compliance alerts tied to CAI and statutory requirements
- Reserve study target tracking against actual balances with funding gap visibility
- Setup designed for volunteer treasurers — no accounting background required
Cons
- General ledger is less deep than Caliber's mature accounting engine
- No multi-association portfolio view (designed for single communities, not management firms)
- Communication tools are functional but not as full-featured as management-company platforms
Q&A
Can a self-managed HOA board buy Caliber Software directly?
Caliber Software sells primarily to professional property management companies. Their pricing, sales process, and onboarding are structured for firms managing portfolios of associations. A single self-managed board would face enterprise-style sales friction, quote-based pricing that assumes per-unit billing across many communities, and implementation overhead that does not match a volunteer board's capacity.
Q&A
Does Caliber Software enforce separation between operating and reserve funds?
Caliber supports multi-fund accounting at the general ledger level, which means a trained accountant can set up proper fund separation. However, the platform does not enforce fund separation by default at the database layer -- the accounting structure depends on how it is configured during implementation. BoardStack enforces operating and reserve fund separation at the database layer: the system will not permit commingling regardless of how the treasurer enters transactions.
Q&A
What is Caliber Software's pricing?
Caliber Software uses quote-based pricing targeted at property management companies. There are no published per-unit or flat rates on their public website. Pricing is negotiated based on the number of units under management across a firm's portfolio. For a self-managed board managing a single community, this structure means no self-service signup and no predictable monthly cost.
Q&A
How does Caliber HOA compare to BoardStack for reserve fund compliance?
Caliber has strong reserve fund reporting with component tracking and funding projections, built for management companies that need to demonstrate reserve adequacy across a portfolio. BoardStack focuses on compliance for a single self-managed community: fund separation enforced at the database layer, reserve study target tracking, and state-specific statutory alerts. The distinction is depth-for-portfolios versus compliance-for-single-boards.
Frequently asked
Common questions before you try it
Is Caliber Software the same as Caliber HOA?
What is the main reason a self-managed board would leave Caliber Software?
Does BoardStack cover all the compliance requirements Caliber does for a self-managed HOA?
Ready to run the full board workflow in one system?
Start Free TrialReady to switch?
- State-specific compliance
- Board-ready reporting and audit packs
- Meetings, governance, and owner workflows
Sources and Review Notes
BoardStack cites the sources used for this page and records the last review date for each reference.