Legal & Compliance

North Dakota HOA Records Inspection: What the Statute Requires

North Dakota governs records inspection through North Dakota Century Code 47-04.1-16 inside the Condominium Act. The statute requires the association to make records available within a reasonable time of a written request.

Curt SloanMay 19, 20265 min read
North Dakota HOA Records Inspection: What the Statute Requires

North Dakota HOA Records Inspection: What the Statute Requires

North Dakota governs records inspection through North Dakota Century Code 47-04.1-16 inside the Condominium Act. The statute requires the association to make records available within a reasonable time of a written request and lets the board withhold a narrow set of categories including pending litigation, attorney client privilege, personnel records of association employees, and member personal data the member has not authorized for release. The North Dakota Attorney General consumer protection division handles consumer complaints when records access goes wrong. Boards that handle the work well treat the statute as a default playbook rather than a wall to negotiate from.

What the statute actually requires

The statute names which records owners can request. Minutes, financial records, vendor contracts, governing documents, and member communications are all producible. The exemption list is narrow. Records that are unfavorable or politically contentious to the current board are still producible. Records that fall outside the four named exemption categories must be produced.

The clock starts when the written request is received. North Dakota boards lose more records claims on silent clocks than on substantive disputes. A request that sits unacknowledged for the entire window establishes the violation without the owner doing anything else.

Why records inspection looks different in North Dakota

North Dakota's Fargo and Grand Forks metro associations absorb the bulk of records inspection requests in the state. The Red River flood cycle drives a recurring records pressure tied to flood insurance documentation, and boards along the river corridor keep their records inventory current because the next high water event is a question of when.

What good North Dakota practice looks like

Four practices distinguish boards that handle records well.

First, adopt a same day acknowledgement standard. Reply within one business day naming who is handling the request and the production date. The acknowledgement is the single most important defensive document a board can create.

Second, document the fee schedule in writing rather than negotiating per request. A fee priced to discourage inspection reads as constructive denial.

Third, apply exemptions narrowly. Document the basis for each redaction next to the redacted passage. Reserve documentation tied to the local pressure described above should sit in a fast access folder, not in the long term archive.

Fourth, watch the North Dakota Attorney General consumer protection division and the CAI national resources (no dedicated ND chapter) for guidance updates.

Where boards get into trouble

Three patterns produce most claims. The management company handoff with no tracking that lets the production window run silently. The overbroad redaction that reads as bad faith and supports an attorney's fees claim. And the access fee priced so high that the owner cannot afford the records, which courts treat as constructive denial.

What your board should do this quarter

Take three actions.

  1. Adopt the same day acknowledgement standard and train the property manager.
  2. Audit your last three records responses. Confirm any withholdings map to a statutory exemption.
  3. Confirm your reserve, insurance, and structural inspection records are indexed and ready for fast access given the local pressure described above.

This is general information for board members, not legal advice. Consult your attorney for your specific situation.

How Manorway helps

Manorway is an AI assisted executive governance platform that runs the records inspection clock automatically, drafts the same day acknowledgement, holds the records inventory, and produces the cover letter for every response. North Dakota boards review. The platform documents. The audit trail writes itself. Book a free governance checkup, no strings attached.

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