The Florida real estate landscape continues to evolve, and for luxury condominium buyers, staying ahead of legislative and contractual changes isn’t just beneficial — it’s essential. As of July 1, 2025, revisions to the Florida Realtors®/Florida Bar Condominium Rider (Addendum A, CR-7) have introduced a powerful new tool that expands what association records a buyer can request during due diligence — giving high-net-worth and discerning buyers more insight into potential investments than ever before.
What Changed — In Practical Terms
Under the revised condo rider, buyers now have the ability to contractually request a broader suite of condo association documents beyond what Florida Statutes automatically require — but only if both parties agree and incorporate this into the purchase contract.
Florida law already mandates critical disclosures — including the declaration, bylaws, financial statements, annual budgets, structural integrity reserve studies, milestone and turnover inspection reports — giving buyers a robust foundation for evaluation.
What’s new in the rider is the expanded optional request list:
- Board meeting agendas and minutes (last 12 months)
- Member meeting agendas and minutes (last 12 months)
- Association insurance declaration pages
- Any additional records the buyer deems important, listed directly in the contract
This advancement enables luxury buyers to gather deeper governance insights, not just the basic statutory requirements.
Why This Matters to High-End Buyers
For sophisticated buyers evaluating premium condos, high-rise residences, or trophy properties, these additional records can reveal nuances that materially impact long-term value and risk:
- Board minutes shine a light on future special assessments, litigation trends, or major capital decisions.
- Member minutes capture owner sentiment on key financial and policy issues not always evident in board summaries.
- Insurance declaration pages help assess adequacy of coverage for liability, windstorm, and flood — especially critical in high-value coastal markets.
These documents provide context that extends past balance sheets and bylaws, empowering decision-making on par with executive-level investment diligence.
How It Works in Practice
This expanded disclosure isn’t automatic — the buyer and seller must agree in the contract that the seller will provide the section 6(b) materials. Once agreed, those records become part of the buyer’s due diligence and a contractual basis for cancellation if issues arise.
In luxury transactions where precision matters, this means you can:
- Negotiate with insight, not assumption
- Anticipate potential assessments or financial obligations
- Evaluate governance effectiveness and long-term association health
This level of review is especially impactful when structuring offers or comparing multiple high-end condo options.
Positioning Yourself as a Strategic Buyer
Top luxury buyers aren’t just purchasing space — they’re acquiring a stake in a community, its governance, and its financial direction. The revised rider’s expanded record request functionality equips you to make those decisions with clarity and confidence.
To leverage this fully:
- Consult your specialist Realtor early — integrate these requests at contract drafting.
- Use the full review period wisely — the statutory window for document evaluation allows a thorough assessment that most luxury buyers should maximize.
- Partner with trusted legal and financial advisors to interpret nuanced association records.
Final Thought
Florida’s condo market is unique — and its complexity rewards buyers who invest in strategic due diligence. The new condo rider enhancements give affluent purchasers a sharper lens into association performance and governance. That level of insight isn’t just good practice — it’s a competitive advantage in premium real estate.
SOURCE: Florida Realtors