Condo HOA Fees in the Philippines: What's Covered, What's Not, and Your Rights as an Owner

You've signed the deed, gotten the keys, and moved in. Then the monthly statement arrives and there it is — the association dues, line-itemed alongside your mortgage. For many Filipino condo owners, this fee is the one they understood the least before buying, and the one that creates the most friction after.
Association dues are not optional, and they do not end when your loan does. Under the Philippine Condominium Act (Republic Act No. 4726), membership in the condominium corporation is automatic and mandatory from the moment you take ownership of a unit. You cannot opt out, and the obligation to pay runs for as long as you own the property.
What exactly you are paying for, how much you should expect to pay depending on where you live, how much an HOA board can legally raise your dues, and what recourse you have when something is wrong — this guide covers all of it.
What Are Condo Association Dues?
Association dues (sometimes called HOA fees or condo dues) are regular monthly payments collected by the condominium corporation from all unit owners. The funds are pooled to cover the cost of maintaining everything that is shared — the lobby, elevators, hallways, amenities, building systems, and the land the building stands on.
The legal basis is found in RA 4726 (The Condominium Act of 1966), which established the condominium corporation as a non-stock, non-profit entity automatically composed of all unit owners. When you buy a condo, you don't just own your unit — you also own an undivided interest in the common areas proportional to your unit's floor area, and you share in the responsibility of maintaining them.
RA 9904 (The Magna Carta for Homeowners and Homeowners' Associations, 2010) further defined the rights and obligations of both owners and their associations, including the rules on how dues are set, increased, and contested.
How Much Are Condo Dues in the Philippines?
Association dues in the Philippines are computed on a per-square-meter per-month basis, meaning larger units pay more in absolute terms. The rate per sqm varies widely based on location, developer, and building tier.
Rate Ranges by Market Segment
Segment | Rate per sqm/month | Example: 50 sqm unit | Example: 80 sqm unit |
|---|---|---|---|
Affordable/mass housing | ₱35–₱65 | ₱1,750–₱3,250 | ₱2,800–₱5,200 |
Mid-market | ₱70–₱100 | ₱3,500–₱5,000 | ₱5,600–₱8,000 |
High-end (Makati, BGC, Ortigas) | ₱90–₱150+ | ₱4,500–₱7,500 | ₱7,200–₱12,000 |
Ultra-premium / luxury towers | ₱150–₱300+ | ₱7,500–₱15,000 | ₱12,000–₱24,000 |
Sources: C2M3 Properties, Bamboo Routes, Federal Land (2025 data)
For the largest luxury units in BGC and Makati — 100 sqm and above in premium developments — monthly dues can reach ₱20,000 to ₱55,000 per month. This is not unusual for towers with concierge services, multiple pools, full gym facilities, and 24/7 building operations staff.
Most Metro Manila condo buyers in the mid-market segment should budget ₱80–₱120 per sqm per month as a working estimate, subject to verification with the specific development.
Dues Are Forever — and They Increase Over Time
Unlike a mortgage that ends at payoff, association dues continue indefinitely. And they increase. Buildings typically adjust dues annually to keep pace with rising operational costs. Under current rules, increases of up to 10% per year can be implemented without a majority vote of members (more on this below). A unit with ₱3,000/month dues today could be ₱4,800/month within ten years at a 5% annual increase — a 60% total rise.
Factor this into your long-term holding costs before you buy.
What Association Dues Actually Cover
Dues are pooled into a common fund managed by the condominium corporation's board of directors. Here is what they typically finance:
1. Building Operations and Administration
The largest single cost in most buildings. This covers salaries and benefits for building management staff, administrative costs (billing, record-keeping, legal compliance), and the professional property management fee if a third-party firm is engaged rather than an in-house team.
2. Security Services
Security personnel costs — including guard agency fees, access control systems, CCTV infrastructure and monitoring, and vehicle entry management. In gated developments, this also covers perimeter security. In many Metro Manila buildings, security represents 25–35% of total dues.
3. Common Area Utilities
Electricity and water for all shared spaces: lobby lighting, elevator operation, hallway lighting, parking lighting, amenity area power, and the water supply to pools, landscaping, and common bathrooms. This does not cover your individual unit — your personal metered electricity and water are billed separately by the utility provider.
4. Amenities Maintenance
Upkeep of the swimming pool (chemicals, cleaning, lifeguard, equipment), fitness center equipment maintenance, function room cleaning and scheduling, children's play areas, and outdoor landscaping. Higher-end buildings with more extensive amenity decks — rooftop gardens, multiple pools, co-working spaces — carry proportionally higher dues because more infrastructure requires maintenance.
5. Building Systems Maintenance
Preventive maintenance contracts (PMC) for elevators, fire suppression systems, HVAC in common areas, plumbing in common shafts, electrical systems, and backup generators. These contracts are ongoing, non-negotiable safety requirements.
6. Building Insurance
Property insurance covering the structure itself (not your unit contents) against fire, natural disaster, and public liability. This is a collective cost borne by all owners through the common fund.
7. The Sinking Fund (Reserve Fund)
Typically 10% of total monthly dues is set aside in a separate reserve fund — sometimes called the sinking fund — specifically for large, non-recurring capital expenditures: elevator replacement, roof waterproofing, full building repainting, major plumbing overhauls, and structural repair work (Federal Land, 2025).
The sinking fund is not for routine maintenance. It is the financial cushion that allows a building to replace a ₱5 million elevator without levying a massive special assessment on owners all at once. Buildings without adequately funded reserves are financial time bombs — eventually something big fails and every owner pays a painful lump sum.
When evaluating a building to buy into, always ask: what is the current balance of the sinking fund?
What Association Dues Do NOT Cover
Understanding exclusions is just as important as knowing what's included.
Your unit's individual utilities. Electricity and water inside your unit are metered separately and billed directly to you by Meralco, Manila Water, Maynilad, or the relevant local utility. Association dues cover utilities only for shared common areas.
Parking. In most Philippine condominiums, parking slots are separate titles (or separate lease agreements) from the residential unit. Parking association dues or maintenance fees are typically charged as a separate line item, ranging from ₱3,000 to ₱7,000 per slot per month depending on building and location (Bamboo Routes, 2025). Always clarify parking charges when comparing total monthly costs.
Your unit's interior repairs and maintenance. Everything within your four walls — flooring, fixtures, appliances, ceiling leaks from your own piping — is your responsibility and cost. The association is only responsible for the building structure and common elements.
Special assessments. These are extraordinary, one-time or temporary levies for expenses not covered by the regular fund — a major repair not anticipated by the sinking fund, legal costs from litigation the building is involved in, or emergency infrastructure work. Special assessments require a majority vote of members at a general meeting and approval from the Human Settlements Adjudication Commission (HSAC) if they exceed threshold amounts set by DHSUD. They are separate from and in addition to your regular monthly dues.
Unit upgrades or renovations. Any renovation you want to do within your unit — new flooring, kitchen remodel, bathroom tile work — is your cost entirely. You will also typically need written approval from the building administration before starting renovation work.
How Dues Increases Work — and Your Rights
This is where most owner disputes begin. Philippine law imposes clear rules on how associations may raise dues, and those rules exist precisely because unchecked increases are a significant financial burden on owners.
The 10% Annual Rule
Under the current regulatory framework (HLURB/HSAC rules implementing RA 9904), a condominium association may increase regular monthly dues by up to 10% per year without requiring a majority vote of all unit owners. This is the administrative threshold: an increase within this range can be approved by the board and communicated to members without convening a general assembly.
Increases beyond 10% require a majority vote of all members at a properly convened Annual General Meeting (AGM) or special meeting, plus regulatory clearance from HSAC/DHSUD before implementation.
A draft HSAC circular under review in 2025 proposes raising this automatic-approval ceiling from 10% to 15%, but as of publication this has not been finalised. The 10% rule currently stands.
What the Board Cannot Do
Unilaterally implement increases beyond 10% without member approval
Impose new fees or charges not provided for in the Master Deed, Declaration of Restrictions, or approved by-laws
Selectively apply dues or penalties in a discriminatory manner
Use the common fund for expenses that do not benefit the collective ownership
Your Right to Financial Transparency
Under RA 9904, unit owners have the right to inspect the association's financial records — including bank statements, expense receipts, and the sinking fund balance. If you have concerns about how funds are being managed, you can request an accounting from the board. The board is legally required to make financial statements available to members.
At the Annual General Meeting, the board must present an audited financial report and a proposed budget for the coming year. Dues for the coming year are approved against this budget.
How to Dispute an Illegal Increase
If your building implements a dues increase that violates the 10% rule, lacks the required member vote, or imposes a fee with no legal basis, here is the process:
First, raise the matter formally in writing to the condominium corporation's board of directors. Request a written explanation and the legal basis for the increase.
If the board fails to respond or refuses to revert the illegal increase, file a complaint with the Human Settlements Adjudication Commission (HSAC) at your regional DHSUD office. HSAC has jurisdiction over disputes between unit owners and their condominium corporations under RA 4726 and RA 9904.
DHSUD may nullify the illegal increase and impose fines on the responsible board members of up to ₱50,000 per violation.
What Happens If You Don't Pay
Non-payment of association dues has serious consequences — far more serious than most new owners realise.
Interest Accumulation
Most condominium by-laws impose a penalty interest of 2–3% per month on overdue dues. An unpaid balance of ₱10,000 accrues ₱200–₱300 in additional charges every single month. Over a year, a ₱10,000 overdue balance becomes ₱12,400–₱13,600 before any legal costs.
Suspension of Amenity Access
The association may suspend your access to amenities — pool, gym, function rooms, and visitor parking — for as long as dues remain unpaid. This is standard in most condominium by-laws and is legally enforceable.
Lien on Your Unit Title (CCT)
Under RA 4726, unpaid association dues create a lien on your Condominium Certificate of Title (CCT). The association can have this lien annotated on your title at the Registry of Deeds. This lien:
Attaches to the property, not just the owner — meaning it survives a sale
Is superior to most other claims against the property, except government taxes
Will show up when any buyer or bank conducts a title verification
Effectively blocks a clean sale or refinancing until the dues are settled in full
If you are selling a condo unit, any unpaid association dues must be cleared before title can be transferred. The buyer's due diligence (LRA title verification) will reveal annotated liens.
Foreclosure
In extreme cases of chronic non-payment, the condominium corporation can pursue judicial or extrajudicial foreclosure of the lien to recover the unpaid dues. This is a last resort, but it has happened — and Philippine courts have upheld it. As one law firm summary noted: condo owners can and do lose their units over accumulated unpaid association dues (DivinaLaw, 2025).
Practical Tips Before You Buy
1. Request the current dues schedule and the last three years of increases. This tells you both your current cost and the trajectory. A building that has been increasing dues 12–15% per year has a cost problem that will continue.
2. Ask for the sinking fund balance. A well-run building should have a reserve fund equivalent to several months of total annual dues. A very low or depleted sinking fund means a special assessment is likely in the next 2–3 years.
3. Review the management audit. Is the building managed by a professional property management firm, or self-managed by the board? Professional management typically results in better financial controls, but at higher cost. Self-managed buildings can be more cost-efficient or chaotic — the by-laws and the quality of elected board members determine which.
4. Calculate total monthly cost including dues. Your real monthly carrying cost on a condo is: mortgage + association dues + parking (if separate) + individual utility estimates. For a mid-market 50 sqm unit in Metro Manila, total monthly cash outflow including all of the above is typically ₱20,000–₱35,000.
5. Read the Master Deed and Declaration of Restrictions before signing. These documents define what the association can and cannot do, what fees may be charged, and what your obligations are. They are legally binding. Most developers will provide them on request before purchase.
Final Thoughts
Association dues are not a hidden cost — they are a structural feature of condo ownership in the Philippines. The mistake most buyers make is not asking enough questions about them before signing. A unit that looks affordable based on purchase price alone can become significantly less attractive once ongoing dues, parking fees, and projected annual increases are factored in over a 10–20 year holding period.
The good news: Philippine law gives unit owners meaningful protections. You have the right to financial transparency, the right to vote on major assessments, and the right to challenge illegal fee increases through HSAC. Knowing those rights — and exercising them when needed — is what separates informed owners from those who simply pay whatever they're billed.
Ready to find a condo that fits your total budget? Start your search at Listd.ph — where verified listings make it easier to compare real costs across developments before you commit.
Sources: Republic Act No. 4726 (Condominium Act of the Philippines); Republic Act No. 9904 (Magna Carta for Homeowners and Homeowners' Associations); DHSUD/HSAC regulatory advisories (dhsud.gov.ph, hsac.gov.ph); C2M3 Properties condo dues analysis; Federal Land condo fee guide; Bamboo Routes condo fees Philippines guide (2025); RichestPH association dues breakdown; Respicio & Co. legal commentaries on HOA dues and lien enforcement; DivinaLaw "Pay Association Dues or Lose Your Unit" (2025).
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