Falling behind on an HOA payment isn't the same as missing your mortgage — but it can still be serious. Once dues go unpaid, an association can record a lien, and that lien can grow fast with interest, late fees, and attorney costs until it becomes a foreclosure.
A cautionary story
A North Carolina case — reported by Cedar Management Group and covered by local news outlets — shows how far this can go. A homeowner fell behind on a roughly $400 HOA fee. The association placed a lien that grew to about $1,200, then moved to foreclose. Her 3,300-square-foot home was sold at the HOA foreclosure auction for about $49,000 — and later resold for around $850,000. She received nothing from that resale. The case drew national attention and prompted lawmakers to consider reforms limiting HOA foreclosure powers.
The bigger trend
This isn't a one-off. As Bankrate reported, analysts have described rising HOA fees as “shadow mortgages,” and HOA-related foreclosures jumped roughly 50% nationally between 2022 and 2025, with Florida, Texas, and California among the most active states. Florida has a very high share of homes governed by an HOA or condo association, which makes this a real risk here.
What you can do
- Get the ledger in writing. Ask the association (or its attorney) for an itemized payoff so you know exactly what's owed and why.
- Ask for a payment plan. Many associations will accept one rather than foreclose.
- Dispute errors. Misapplied payments and improper fees happen — you can challenge them.
- Talk to a Florida attorney early. An HOA foreclosure is still a court process with deadlines and defenses.
If an HOA lien has snowballed and your home is genuinely at risk, selling before the auction can protect the equity you've built — often far more than you'd lose at a forced sale. We're glad to help you understand whether that's the right move or whether keeping the home is still within reach. Talk it through with us, free and private.
