How your strata property type may affect your levy payments

How your strata property type may affect your levy payments header image

How your strata property type may affect your levy payments

“Am I paying too much in owners corporation fees?”

No two properties are exactly the same, so this question may be a hard comparison to answer as there are various factors that come into play.

Here are 4 aspects of your strata property to consider, and how they may affect your levy payments:

  1. Building size
  2. The design of your strata property
  3. Your facilities
  4. Your strata property’s financial status

 

1. Building size

Boutique-sized apartment buildings typically have less common property, which means less cleaning, repairs and maintenance, and lower utilities. Small apartment buildings with a lean number of lots (an individual plot of land that is owned) also tend to have fewer high-cost facilities to operate and maintain.

However, small is not always better. Large apartment buildings with more than 100 lots are more expensive to run, but will have the economies of scale to significantly reduce the cost per lot owner, simply because there are more people to share the costs. A swimming pool in a large complex with 100 lots, for instance, can cost each lot owner as little as $1.50 per week.

Having an economy of scale also comes in handy when owners corporations or bodies corporate have to raise special levies or fees for unexpected or urgent expenditure such as roof repairs or asbestos removal. Imagine having to raise $50,000 amongst only 10 lot owners. The same principle applies to base charges such as bank account management – the fewer lots there are to share the costs, the more you will have to pay.

 

2. The design of your strata property

When it comes to owners corporation and body corporate fees, very few people consider the impact the choice of bricks and mortar can have on ongoing maintenance fees. Take, for example, timber, which is a popular choice for walkways and decking. Sure, it’s a premium building material and it looks great, but it also risks splinters, warping and rotting, and will need to be cleaned, oiled and repaired yearly.

Timber decking around a standard pool, for instance, can cost anywhere between $7,000 to $10,000 a year to maintain. Now divide those costs between how many lots there are in the building, and you’ll have a better idea of how much it contributes to the overall cost of your fees.

Don’t overlook common areas such as lawn and gardens either, especially if you don’t have the economy of scale to share the costs. There are low maintenance options for outdoor areas, such as gravel, paving and native plants, but even the most basic garden will require some tender love and care, and therefore maintenance costs.

 

3. Your facilities

This is the most obvious reasons for high owners corporation or body corporation fees, especially in small to moderate-sized apartment buildings. Swimming pools, gyms, cinema rooms, barbecue areas, and even lifts and automatic garage doors will add to the overall cost of your fees. In larger complexes, you may also have to pay for on-site staff such as concierge or a building manager, which can add hundreds of thousands to your owners corporations’ overall expenses. You might like the idea of a 24-7 concierge, but it will set your owners corporation back by up to $280,000 a year.

In most large complexes, it’s hard to avoid some of these features, especially in new developments. There comes a point, too, when convenience trumps expense, like having that on-site gym and having little excuse not to go in the morning.

 

4. Your strata property’s financial status

If you live in an established apartment building, how your property is managed will be a big contributing factor to how much you pay, too. Before you buy, ask to have a search of the records undertaken, so you have an idea of spending and what’s already in the kitty. Poor budgeting and careless spending can have a flow on effect for years.

If the fees seem too good to be true, they probably are. Insufficient funds tend to lead to special levies, which can place a financial burden on owners. And more generally, don’t enable you to meet your obligations to maintain common property.

If you’d like to find out more on managing the financials for your strata property, click here to download your free Community Living guide. Or ask a question at StrataFAQ.com.au.


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