COMPLIANCE OBLIGATION
Annual budget meeting notice
- Statute
- §718.112(2)(e)
- Notice
- ≥ 14 days prior
- Send by
- Sep 30, 2026
Built for HB 1021 + HB 913. Down to the section number. The software side of Florida condo compliance — statutory deadlines, notices, and records, dated and exportable.
See how it works§ 718.112(2)(c) — Board meeting notice required ≥ 48 hours in advance.718.112(2)(c) — 48-hr notice
Florida-only · Compliance, documented.
OFFICIAL RECORDS · § 718.111(12) · OPERATIONAL GUIDE
Last updated May 2, 2026 · ~2,400 words · 11 minute read.
If you are a board officer, a CAM, or the front-desk staff at a Florida condominium, this is the page to bookmark.
A written records request from a unit owner triggers a 10-business-day clock. By the end of the tenth business day, the records must be available for inspection at a location within the county where the association is located.
What triggers the clock.Receipt of a written request. Email counts. A signed note dropped at the front desk counts. A request from the owner’s authorized representative (an attorney, a contracted CPA, the spouse named on the unit) counts.
What “available for inspection” means.The records are physically or electronically present at a defined location, and the requesting owner has been given a defined time and reasonable means to inspect them. A vague “we’ll let you know when they’re ready” is not availability. Sending the owner a Dropbox link with the right files inside, with a confirmation that they can access it, does count.
What “business day” means. Monday through Friday, excluding state-recognized holidays. A request received on Friday at 4:55 PM starts the clock the next business day. A request received on a holiday starts the clock the next business day after.
A note on weekends and after-hours. The statute does not require records to be made available outside business hours. It does require them to be made available promptly within the 10-business-day window. Plan for the request that comes in Friday afternoon.
Section 718.111(12)(a) enumerates the records the association must maintain. The list below is a working summary; the implementer should hyperlink each item to its full statutory definition for owner-facing use.
A handful of records are excluded from owner inspection: attorney-client privileged communications, personnel records of association employees, certain owner personal information (Social Security numbers, payment account information), records relating to a pending civil or criminal action against an owner, and medical records. Excluded does not mean destroyed; the association still maintains them, but they are not produced on request.
The fee structure is statutory, not discretionary.
What you can charge.
What you cannot charge.
How to invoice. Itemize. Lines for copies, lines for media, lines for labor over 30 minutes with the start and end times. Send the invoice with the records, not before. Producing the records is not contingent on the invoice being paid.
Associations of 150 or more units (excluding any timeshare-managed units) must maintain a website or mobile application that posts the official records. Owner access is through a private, owner-only login.
What must be posted. The current declaration, articles, bylaws, rules; the current and prior-year financial reports; the SIRS and the prior SIRS; the milestone-inspection reports; current contracts; current insurance policies; minutes for the past year; the budget and reserve schedule; and notice of any meeting at which a vote is being taken.
What is exempt. Personnel records, attorney-client privileged communications, owner personal information beyond name and unit, and records relating to pending litigation.
What “owner-only login” means. A unique credential per unit owner. Not a single shared password. Not the building Wi-Fi password. Not a public-facing page indexed by search engines. The login should produce an audit log of who accessed what and when. Counsel will ask for that log.
Associations under 150 units. Not required to maintain a website-of-record, but the 10-business-day inspection rule still applies. Many sub-150-unit associations choose to maintain a portal anyway because it is operationally easier than handling paper requests.
Refusal is the legal trap. Many boards refuse without knowing they have refused. Each of the following has been treated as refusal in Florida community-association litigation.
1.Silence past the 10-business-day deadline.
No acknowledgment, no production, no written reason for delay. The clock ran out and the board did nothing.
2.Conditioning production on the owner stating a purpose.
The statute does not require the owner to explain why they want the records. Asking is not itself refusal; refusing to produce until the owner answers, is.
3.Partial production without a written reason for the omission.
Producing the minutes but not the contracts, with no explanation, is refusal as to the contracts.
4.Producing in an inconvenient format.
Handing over a stack of unsorted paper when the owner asked for digital copies the association already has, is treated as functional refusal.
5.Charging an unauthorized fee as a precondition.
A "deposit" before production, or an "administrative fee" not authorized by the statute.
6.Routing the request through counsel without producing.
Counsel may review, but the production deadline does not pause for legal review unless a defined exemption applies.
7.Claiming a record does not exist when it should exist by statute.
If the association is required to maintain it (a current insurance policy, a current roster), claiming it cannot be located is a separate violation in addition to refusal.
If any of the above applies, the board is exposed. Document a written reason in the same business day, contemporaneously with the partial production or the delay, and send it to the owner. A documented reason is not a defense in every case, but a contemporaneous record is materially better than a reconstructed one.
Three short templates. Each should be customized for the association’s name and counsel’s preferences.
Send within one business day of receipt.
Date: [Mon DD, YYYY] [Owner name] [Unit number] Dear [Owner name], The association received your written request for official records on [Mon DD, YYYY at HH:MM]. Under § 718.111(12)(c)1.a., we will make the requested records available for inspection by [Mon DD, YYYY], which is the tenth business day following receipt. The records will be available for inspection at [location] from [time] to [time], or by digital access at [link] for which you will receive credentials separately. If you would like copies, the statutory rates apply. We will provide an itemized invoice with the records. Sincerely, [Officer name] [Officer title] [Association name]
Itemized per § 718.111(12)(c)1.
Records request reference: [RR-YYYY-####] Owner: [name], unit [number] Request received: [Mon DD, YYYY HH:MM] Records produced: [Mon DD, YYYY HH:MM] Itemized charges (per § 718.111(12)(c)1): - Copies, [N] pages at $[rate]/page: $[amount] - Electronic media, [N] units at $[rate]: $[amount] - Personnel time, [N] hours at $[rate]/hour (first 30 minutes excluded): $[amount] Total: $[amount] Payment is requested but is not a precondition of production. The records have been provided.
Use only with counsel’s sign-off.
Date: [Mon DD, YYYY] [Owner name] [Unit number] Dear [Owner name], The association received your written request for official records on [Mon DD, YYYY at HH:MM]. The following records, or portions thereof, are not being produced for the reasons stated: - [Record description]: withheld under § 718.111(12)(c)3 as [attorney-client privileged | personnel record | pending litigation | other statutory exemption]. All other requested records are being made available in accordance with § 718.111(12)(c)1.a. by [Mon DD, YYYY]. If you believe a record has been withheld in error, you may respond in writing and the board will reconsider. You are also entitled to seek further remedy under § 718.111(12) and to file a complaint with the Division of Florida Condominiums. Sincerely, [Officer name] [Officer title]
Seven failure modes from the wild. Each is a documented basis for a successful owner suit.
Product surface → /features/documents
If you want this audit-ready by default, here is what we automate. Records requests come in through a single intake (board portal, owner-side form, or forwarded email) and get timestamped at receipt. The 10-business-day countdown surfaces on the board dashboard. Per-document access logs record who downloaded what, from where, and when. The 150-unit website-of-record posts the enumerated records automatically and gives each owner a unique login. Refusal letters generate from the template above with the statutory citation pre-populated.
We are not your lawyer. We built this so your lawyer has the timestamps, the access logs, and the production receipts when an owner files a complaint.
We are not your lawyer. Nothing on this page is legal advice.
The 10-business-day clock starts on receipt. We log every timestamp, route every request, and produce the audit PDF when counsel asks. Twenty-minute product walkthrough on request.