Alabama guide

Alabama condo insurance requirements

Insurance is the defining risk in Alabama condo purchases. The Alabama Uniform Condominium Act (§35-8A-313) requires the association to insure common elements against direct physical loss to at least 80% of actual cash value (or the percentage needed to avoid a co-insurance penalty), plus liability coverage — but it does not separately mandate wind, named-storm, or flood coverage.

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On the Gulf Coast in Baldwin and Mobile counties, that gap collides with the most severe coastal wind exposure outside Florida and Louisiana: brokers report master premiums tripling, named-storm deductibles of $25,000–$50,000 and beyond, wind increasingly placed through the state's AIUA wind pool, and storm surge excluded as a flood rather than wind. For an Alabama buyer, the master policy is both a risk document and a financing document — its deductibles and coverage gaps drive special assessments and can affect Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac eligibility. Inland, Birmingham, Tuscaloosa, Huntsville, and Montgomery face tornado and hail premium pressure instead.

What §35-8A-313 requires — and what it does not

The statute requires property insurance on the common elements to at least 80% of actual cash value and liability coverage, makes unit owners insureds under the master liability policy, and waives the insurer's subrogation against owners and household members. It does not require flood, named-storm, wind-specific, or fidelity coverage — those are left to the declaration, lenders, and Fannie/Freddie. So a policy can satisfy §35-8A-313 and still leave a coastal building badly exposed to wind and surge. Coverage below the 80%-ACV floor is itself a statutory red flag.

The AIUA wind pool and named-storm deductibles

When private carriers withdraw coastal wind, eligible Baldwin and Mobile county property is placed through the Alabama Insurance Underwriting Association (AIUA) — a wind-and-hail-only insurer of last resort that does not cover flood or storm surge. Residential AIUA limits have historically capped near $500,000 dwelling / $250,000 contents, a real exposure gap for high-value condos and master policies. Master deductibles of $25,000–$50,000 plus percentage named-storm deductibles are common, and after a storm they pass through to owners as special or loss assessments. A wind placement through AIUA signals a stressed coastal insurance market worth examining closely.

Flood and surge are a separate, excluded peril

Standard master policies and AIUA exclude flood; coastal condos need NFIP or private flood, typically a master RCBAP on common elements plus owner contents flood. Storm surge is a flood, not wind — a recurring coverage-gap dispute after Gulf storms such as Ivan and Sally. Confirm whether the association carries master flood and whether the unit needs its own flood policy, and pull the flood zone and base flood elevation for any coastal unit.

Insurance as a financing document

Insufficient master coverage, excessive deductibles, or inadequate wind and flood can directly cause Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac ineligibility — and roughly seventy Alabama coastal projects are reportedly on the unavailable list. FORTIFIED construction earns mandated wind-premium discounts in Alabama, but the Strengthen Alabama Homes grant program excludes condos (single-family owner-occupied only), so associations must self-fund FORTIFIED upgrades to capture them. Read the renewal history and ask the board directly about any non-renewal or carrier change in the last 36 months.

Your HO-6 and loss-assessment coverage

Because master deductibles are large and pass through to owners, an Alabama coastal owner's HO-6 loss-assessment limit matters more than usual. Price loss-assessment coverage against the actual master deductible, and confirm your own wind and flood treatment, since the master policy may not protect your unit's interior or contents. Treat the master deductible as a potential out-of-pocket figure, not an abstraction.

Alabama legal references

Informational only. Not legal advice. Always confirm against current statute and counsel.

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Reviewer's checklist

  • Read the master declarations page: carrier, limits, and §35-8A-313 80%-ACV adequacy
  • Confirm whether wind is private or placed through the AIUA wind pool
  • Read the named-storm and all-risk deductibles as a potential special-assessment figure
  • Confirm whether the association carries master flood (RCBAP) in a surge zone
  • Ask whether the association had a non-renewal or carrier change in the last 36 months
  • Check whether insurance inadequacy affects Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac eligibility
  • Review your HO-6 loss-assessment limit against the master deductible
  • Confirm your own wind and flood coverage for the unit interior and contents
  • Check for any FORTIFIED designation and associated premium discounts
  • Pull the flood zone / base flood elevation and read the minutes for storm-claim history

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  • Reserve studythe big repairs
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A special assessment, an insurance non-renewal, a thin reserve study — find out whether it signals real risk, checked against your state's rules, with page citations you can verify. No cost, no obligation.

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Reviewed by Kirk Hasley, Founder. Every claim here is checked against current Alabama statute and primary sources, using the same documented review framework we run on every file. Last reviewed June 13, 2026.

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A special assessment, an insurance non-renewal, a thin reserve study — find out whether it signals real risk, checked against your state's rules, with page citations you can verify. No cost, no obligation.

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