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HOA Reserve Fund Compliance in Tennessee: What Volunteer Boards Need to Know

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Tennessee's Homeowners Association Act (T.C.A. §66-27-201 et seq.) establishes governance and financial management obligations for HOA boards. Reserve studies are not explicitly required, but the fiduciary duty standard implied by Tennessee law means volunteer board members who ignore reserve planning or commingle operating and reserve funds face personal liability exposure. The state's rapid residential growth has produced thousands of new self-managed communities in Nashville, Memphis, and Knoxville.

Tennessee’s Homeowners Association Act provides a governance framework for planned communities but leaves many financial management details to board discretion. For the thousands of self-managed communities in Nashville, Memphis, and Knoxville, the quality of financial governance depends on what individual board members understand about their fiduciary obligations.

Nashville’s growth is the dominant context for HOA compliance in Tennessee. The metro area added substantial new residential development in Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson, and Davidson counties over the past decade, producing communities whose volunteer boards are managing HOA finances for the first time. BoardStack gives first-time volunteer treasurers a structured starting point for reserve fund planning, budget management, and financial recordkeeping — without requiring expertise in property law or accounting.

Memphis and Knoxville have different profiles. Memphis has a mix of established communities with aging infrastructure and newer developments in Shelby County’s suburban areas. Knoxville has significant HOA activity around the University of Tennessee and in the retirement communities of eastern Tennessee. In both markets, the self-managed board treasurer typically works without dedicated tools — QuickBooks for operating expenses and a spreadsheet for reserve tracking, with no mechanism to flag when contributions fall behind the pace needed to fund future capital needs. That gap is the compliance risk that organized reserve fund management addresses.

Tennessee Homeowners Association Act — Scope and Applicability (T.C.A. §66-27-201)

The Tennessee Homeowners Association Act applies to planned communities where membership and assessment obligations are mandatory. The Act establishes the legal framework for HOA governance but does not prescribe detailed financial management requirements comparable to some other states' HOA statutes. Boards operate under the general fiduciary duty implied by their role as association officers.

Financial Records and Member Access (T.C.A. §66-27-215)

Tennessee HOA boards must maintain books of account and make them available to members upon request under T.C.A. §66-27-215. Records include bank statements, invoices, contracts, and financial statements. Boards that maintain records informally — in personal spreadsheets or email — risk noncompliance with the statute's accessibility requirements.

Fiduciary Duty of Tennessee HOA Board Members

Tennessee courts apply a fiduciary duty standard to HOA board members consistent with the state's general nonprofit corporation law. This duty includes prudent financial management, which Tennessee courts have interpreted to include planning for foreseeable capital expenditures. Boards that ignore known reserve deficiencies or impose surprise special assessments without documented prior planning face heightened liability exposure.

Fund Segregation — Standard of Care

Tennessee statutes do not explicitly require separate reserve accounts, but operating a single bank account for both operating expenses and reserve contributions is inconsistent with the fiduciary duty standard. Tennessee boards should maintain separate, labeled accounts for operating and reserve funds to produce the paper trail that demonstrates reserve contributions are being set aside for their intended purpose.

Tennessee has approximately 7,500 community associations, according to industry research.

Source: Foundation for Community Association Research

Tennessee HOA Market Overview by Metro Area

Estimated HOA community counts across major Tennessee metropolitan areas based on publicly available data.

Metro AreaEst. HOA CommunitiesPrimary Compliance Risk
Nashville Metro~3,500+Rapid growth, reserve planning gaps
Memphis~1,800+Financial recordkeeping, fiduciary duty
Knoxville~1,200+Capital planning, fund segregation
Chattanooga~700+Budget adoption, records access

What obligations does the Tennessee Homeowners Association Act impose on volunteer boards?

Under T.C.A. §66-27-201 et seq., Tennessee HOA boards must maintain the association consistent with the governing documents, maintain books of account accessible to members, and manage association funds prudently. The fiduciary duty standard implies that boards must plan for foreseeable capital expenditures, maintain separate operating and reserve accounts, and document their financial decisions in a way that can withstand member scrutiny.

Why do Nashville-area HOA boards face particular reserve planning challenges?

Nashville's rapid residential growth has produced many new planned communities with volunteer boards managing HOA governance for the first time. New communities often set reserve contribution levels based on immediate infrastructure needs rather than long-range capital modeling. As community infrastructure ages and replacement timelines approach, boards that did not model long-range capital needs in the early years face funding gaps that compound over time, often requiring large special assessments that could have been avoided with adequate initial reserve planning.

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Does Tennessee require HOA boards to conduct a reserve study?
No. Tennessee's Homeowners Association Act (T.C.A. §66-27-201 et seq.) does not explicitly require reserve studies. However, the fiduciary duty standard applied by Tennessee courts includes prudent financial management for foreseeable capital needs. A reserve study is the standard tool for demonstrating that reserve contributions are calculated on a defensible basis, and its absence makes the board's financial decisions harder to defend in a member dispute.
What financial records must a Tennessee HOA provide to members?
Under T.C.A. §66-27-215, Tennessee HOA boards must maintain books of account and make them available to members upon request. Records include bank statements, invoices, contracts, reserve account statements, and meeting minutes. Boards should retain records for a minimum of five years consistent with general Tennessee nonprofit recordkeeping standards.
How does Tennessee's rapid residential growth affect HOA compliance obligations?
Tennessee's rapid population growth — particularly in the Nashville metro — has produced many new planned communities whose volunteer boards are navigating HOA governance for the first time. New communities often set initial reserve contribution levels too low, focusing on immediate infrastructure that is brand-new rather than modeling long-range capital needs. The result is a funding gap that compounds over time and eventually requires a large special assessment.

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