The Minnesota Senate convened today to debate and vote on SF 1750, a bill that, along with its Minnesota House companion, HF 1268, proposes significant amendments to the Minnesota Common Interest Ownership Act (MCIOA). You can read SJJ Law’s earlier coverage of the bills here and here.

The Minnesota Senate voted in favor of SF 1750, passing the bill. SJJ Law’s own Tyler Ebert was live in the Minnesota Senate Chambers to provide timely updates.

One of the bill’s primary authors, Eric Lucero (30, R) began by introducing a substantial “delete all” amendment which rewrote significant portions of the bill in response to feedback from unit owners, board members, and other community association advocates.

This amendment passed and changed the following:

  • The “meet and confer” requirement has been meaningfully relaxed. Associations must now simply notify unit owners of their right to meet and confer before beginning collection or enforcement action. If an owner fails to respond within 30 days, the association may proceed. This replaces the original mandatory conference process that would have required direct participation from a board member.
  • Unit owners would still get the power to revoke association bylaws or rules but now would need to exercise those powers through a process better aligned with existing MCIOA procedures: 20% of unit owners must request a special meeting, and a majority of all unit owners—not just those present—must vote to repeal.
  • Attorney fee caps have been removed as have most restrictions on the ability to assess back attorney fees to individual units. Associations can now recover actual legal fees with narrow exceptions.
  • Late fees are capped at the greater of $15 or 5% of the late fee regardless of whether it is a regular assessment or a special assessment. This change represents a meaningful change from the original caps of $15 on late regular assessments and the lesser of 5% or $100 on special assessments.
  • In the event that foreclosure is necessary, associations can again include certain fines in their lien amounts where the violation involves repeat conduct tied to health or safety risks, physical damage, or unauthorized rentals.
  • The actual threshold and timeline on which foreclosure can occur is now tiered: for units with monthly assessments of $500 or less, foreclosure may begin once the balance exceeds $1,500 or remains unpaid for 120 days; for units with higher assessments, the threshold rises to $2,500. This is compared to an original threshold of $5,000 or more which needed to be outstanding for 120 days or more.
  • Management company fee caps were removed. In their place, the bill adds disclosure rules for both management and board members, bans inducements to secure contracts, and requires at least three bids for services over $50,000. Exceptions apply for emergency work, warranty obligations, or when only one vendor is reasonably available.

After these block amendments were introduced, a series of six (6) floor amendments were introduced with three (3) securing enough votes to pass:

  1. Local governments would no longer be allowed to require the creation of a HOA as a condition for approving residential development projects. Cities, counties, and other local entities also cannot dictate the contents of HOA governing documents or require rules to be adopted or repealed unless specifically requested by the developer. Similar language was removed from an earlier version of SF 1750, but the new amendment includes exemptions allowing continue municipal mandates around maintenance and insurance of common elements and easements to public infrastructure.
  2. Associations may still charge for furnishing documents required in connection with a unit sale, but that fee is now capped at $150.
  3. A proposed provision that would have treated silence from a mortgage lender as implied consent to dissolve a common interest community has been removed. Associations will still need to obtain affirmative consent from first mortgagees before proceeding with dissolution if common elements are involved.

Now that SF 1750 has passed the Senate, its path forward remains uncertain. With less than two weeks left in the legislative session—which ends May 19—the Legislature still must finalize major items, including the state’s budget and tax bills. The House version of the legislation, which now differs substantially from the Senate’s amended bill, was last referred to the House Commerce Finance and Policy Committee back in March 2025, where it has not advanced since.

For updates on SF 1750 and other legal matters affecting HOAs, follow us on LinkedIn or Facebook.

Bill Author Bios

STAY UPDATED

Enter your email below to be included on our newsletter!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.