A special assessment is a one-time charge levied on condo unit owners when the corporation's reserve fund doesn't have enough money to cover a major repair or capital expense.
Every condo corporation in Ontario is required by law to maintain a reserve fund — money set aside specifically for major repairs and replacements: roof, elevators, parking structure, windows, HVAC systems, and similar long-lived assets. When that fund runs short of what's needed for a repair, the board can vote to levy a special assessment against all unit owners to make up the difference.
Special assessments are typically allocated proportionally based on unit factor — a percentage assigned to each unit that reflects its share of the common elements. A unit with a higher unit factor (usually a larger or more valuable unit) pays a larger share of the assessment.
Assessments can range from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands, depending on the size of the repair and the shortfall. A building with a severely underfunded reserve facing a $2 million parking structure repair might levy $8,000–$15,000 per unit. A smaller assessment for a minor repair might be $500–$2,000 per unit.
The most common causes:
Special assessments are not necessarily a sign of a poorly managed building — sometimes they reflect genuinely unforeseen events. But a pattern of assessments or a current pending assessment on a building you're considering is a serious flag.
Ontario's condo legislation gives buyers a mandatory 10-day review period after receiving the status certificate and related documents. The status certificate will disclose:
A reserve fund study is a separate document (not always included in the standard status certificate package — request it) that shows the projected funding of the reserve over time. A study showing the fund is significantly below its target or projected to run into deficit is a warning sign even if no assessment has been levied yet.
Have a real estate lawyer review the status certificate before your condition expires. This is not optional.
If your building has a pending or recently levied special assessment, expect it to affect your sale. Buyers and their agents will see it in the status certificate. Sophisticated buyers will factor it into their offer price. If the assessment is large and payable in a lump sum, it may need to be disclosed and negotiated as part of the transaction.
Buildings with a history of assessments or a currently underfunded reserve tend to carry a discount in the market. Buyers hear about these things. It shows up in how long units sit and what they ultimately sell for.
Knowing this before you buy is the whole point.