Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac announce revisions to condo insurance standards Updates include investor concentration limits, a limited review process, and expanded waivers of project review
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Here’s a clear breakdown of what’s actually happening with the new Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac condo insurance + project review changes (March 2026) and what it really means:
🧩 Big Picture
These updates from the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) are aimed at:
Lowering insurance costs
Making more condos eligible for financing
Addressing the insurance crisis (especially in states like Florida)
👉 Net effect: More condos will qualify for conventional loans again and monthly payments may improve.
🔑 Key Changes Explained
1. 🏢 Investor concentration limits — REMOVED
Previously: ~50% cap on investor-owned units in many cases
Now: That limit is eliminated (for full reviews)
👉 Impact:
Easier financing in investor-heavy condos
Opens up deals that were previously declined
2. 📋 Limited review process — ELIMINATED
The old “limited review” shortcut is going away
Replaced by:
Full review OR
Waiver of project review
👉 Impact:
More documentation required in many deals
Could slow some transactions
BUT improves risk oversight of condo projects
3. 🧾 Expanded waiver of project review
Now applies to projects with up to 10 units (previously smaller scope)
👉 Impact:
Huge win for:
Small condo buildings
Non-warrantable deals that can now pass
4. 🏝️ Florida-specific rule — REMOVED
No more mandatory PERS review for new attached condo projects in Florida
👉 Impact:
Speeds up approvals in Florida
Big deal for your local market
5. 🛡️ Insurance changes (THIS is the headline driver)
Roof coverage flexibility
Now allowed:
Actual Cash Value (ACV) on roofs
Still required:
Replacement Cost Value (RCV) on rest of property
👉 Translation:
Roof doesn’t have to be insured “brand new”
This dramatically lowers premiums
Other insurance simplifications
Removed strict replacement cost documentation rules
Dropped inflation guard requirement
Simplified deductible rules
👉 Impact:
More HOAs can comply
Fewer deals were killed over insurance technicalities
6. 💰 Stronger reserve requirements (important hidden change)
Reserve funding requirement increasing:
From 10% → 15% (effective 2027)
👉 Impact:
Better long-term condo stability
BUT:
Higher HOA dues likely
More scrutiny on associations
⚖️ What This Means in the Real World
👍 Positives
More condos become financeable
Lower insurance costs → lower monthly payments
Fewer “non-warrantable” deal killers
Big relief in high-cost insurance markets (like Florida)
⚠️ Trade-offs
More full reviews = more paperwork
HOAs face:
Higher reserve requirements
More financial scrutiny
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