North Dakota HOA & Condo Association Laws

North Dakota’s condominium chapter is a concise horizontal-property statute; most governance flows from declarations, bylaws, and the Nonprofit Corporations Act.

Which statutes apply in North Dakota?

Condominiums
North Dakota Condominium Ownership of Real Property (N.D.C.C. ch. 47-04.1)
HOAs / planned communities
No dedicated HOA statute — recorded declarations, bylaws, and state nonprofit-corporation law govern.

Key compliance rules for North Dakota boards and managers

  • Statute addresses creation, common areas, and assessment obligations
  • Governing documents control meetings, voting, and enforcement
  • Nonprofit law supplies default corporate governance

Resale and disclosure requirements

No statutory resale certificate; associations provide assessment statements per documents.

Running associations in North Dakota?

Portier369 handles the operational side of North Dakota compliance — official records, owner and board notices, reserve and budget tracking, violation due process, and document packages — in one platform built for community association managers.

Frequently asked questions

What law governs condo associations in North Dakota?

Condominiums in North Dakota are governed by the North Dakota Condominium Ownership of Real Property (N.D.C.C. ch. 47-04.1). Homeowners associations are generally governed by their recorded declarations, bylaws, and state nonprofit-corporation law.

Are resale disclosures required in North Dakota?

No statutory resale certificate; associations provide assessment statements per documents.

What software helps North Dakota associations stay compliant?

Association management software like Portier369 supports the operational side of North Dakota compliance: maintaining official records, distributing meeting notices, tracking reserves and budgets, running violation due process with notices and hearings, and assembling resale document packages.

Nearby state guides

This guide is an educational summary, not legal advice. Statutes are amended regularly — confirm current law with an attorney licensed in North Dakota before acting.