Where Maryland HOA dues actually go. And what 15 percent looks like back in the budget.
Manorway surveyed HOA boards across 12 to 240 unit communities about their annual dues, where the money lands, and what they wish they had more time to do. Pilot boards that paired their decisions with AI assistance closed their year with average dues reductions of 15 percent or more, without cutting reserve contributions. The patterns hold under Maryland HOA Act the same way they hold under any state HOA framework.
Where the dues actually go
Across surveyed communities, annual operating expense per door averaged in tight bands. The bigger surprise was how much of that went to soft costs the board could not see line by line.
Where AI assistance shows up in the budget
The 15 percent reduction is not one big line item. It is six modest line items that compound. None of them required boards to give up authority or hire fewer professionals. They required boards to stop paying for tasks an AI assistant could draft and a human could approve in minutes.
Resident communications, meeting minutes, violation notices, agenda packets. AI assistance drafts the first pass. The board approves. Pilots reduced admin hours billed by 40 to 60 percent.
AI assistance compares vendor bids line by line, flags missing line items, and surfaces local rate benchmarks. Pilots caught an average of 8 percent in scope and pricing discrepancies per bid cycle.
AI assistance reads master policy declarations and flags Maryland HOA Act gap exposure before renewal. Boards walked into broker conversations with the questions ready.
AI assistance compares the current funding schedule against the latest reserve study recommendation and flags drift before special assessments become inevitable.
AI assistance cites the relevant Maryland Homeowners Association Act, Real Property Title 11B section next to every board action. Cuts attorney review time and reduces the chance of a procedurally invalid decision.
Pilot board members reported reclaiming 4 to 8 hours per week. The hardest cost in volunteer governance is the treasurer who burns out. Reducing administrative drag keeps boards staffed.
How we ran the survey
Manorway interviewed 31 HOA boards between January and March 2026 as the founding research cohort. Communities ranged from 12 unit townhome associations to 240 unit master planned communities. Single family, condominium, and mixed use boards were all represented. Interviews lasted 45 to 90 minutes and were paired with three years of dues budget records where available.
Pilot data on the 15 percent reduction is drawn from the communities that operated under Manorway assistance for at least one full annual budget cycle. The savings are net of Manorway subscription cost. Reserve contributions in pilot communities were held flat or increased.
Maryland cohort: The founding cohort surveyed Washington boards, where Manorway first launched its state specific compliance module under WUCIOA. The dues breakdown, AI assistance unlocks, and board governance patterns generalize to Maryland HOA boards operating under Maryland Homeowners Association Act, Real Property Title 11B. Manorway adds a state specific compliance module with each new state. Your walkthrough will include the Maryland HOA Act citations and Maryland specific guidance for your community.
See where your Maryland HOA budget compares.
Book a 20 minute walkthrough and we will mark your community against the cohort, line by line, with Maryland HOA Act context for your state. No pressure, no obligation, you keep the analysis either way.
Book a walkthrough →