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Pillar guide · 11 min read

How to Vet a NYC Co-op Before Buying: Board Minutes + Public Records

By NYC Property Audit · Published December 15, 2025 · Updated May 1, 2026

Co-ops are not condos. In NYC, the legal distinction is enormous: when you "buy" a co-op, you're actually buying shares in a corporation and a proprietary lease that lets you occupy a specific apartment. The corporation owns the building. The board controls everything from your renovation plans to who you can sublet to.

That structure changes your due diligence. The board minutes — usually 6-24 months of past meeting notes — are the single most valuable document you'll read. Below is what to look for, how to read it efficiently, and the 8 deal-killer signals that should make you walk before you waste a deposit on the application fee.

Why co-op DD is different from condo DD

  • You own shares, not real property. Title insurance won't fully protect you the way it does for condos.
  • Your monthly cost is "maintenance," not "common charges + taxes." Maintenance includes a pro-rated share of building taxes, building mortgage debt service (called the underlying mortgage), and operating costs.
  • The board approves you, your renovations, and your sublet. A board that's notorious for rejections affects your exit liquidity.
  • You inherit the building's underlying mortgage. If the building re-finances at a higher rate, your maintenance goes up.
  • Special assessments are common. The board can vote one in with relatively little notice if the reserve fund is low.

Quick reference — 8 deal-killer signals

  1. Underlying mortgage matures in the next 24 months at much higher market rates
  2. Reserve fund below 3 months of operating costs
  3. Special assessment approved or proposed within last 12 months
  4. Open Local Law 11 facade work with no remediation plan
  5. Active litigation > $250K
  6. 30%+ of units in arrears on maintenance
  7. Board has rejected 3+ qualified applicants in the last 2 years
  8. Recent CEO-level board turnover with no transition documentation

Phase 1 — Pre-offer public-record scan (10 min, free)

Same as condo: pull the building's HPD / DOB / OATH / DOF record before submitting your offer. Free audit here →

Co-op specific items to flag:

  • Building age — pre-war co-ops (built before 1942) have different maintenance profiles than post-war (1946-1960s) or modern (1980s+)
  • Local Law 11 status — pre-war buildings often have ongoing facade issues
  • Boiler age — pre-war buildings frequently have 30-40 year old boilers nearing replacement
  • Open elevator violations — pre-war elevators are expensive to modernize ($150K-$500K per shaft)

Phase 2 — Board minutes review (after offer accepted, before contract)

Your attorney will request the last 12-24 months of board minutes. They're often dense, badly formatted, and full of acronyms. Here's what to scan for:

Financial signals

  • "Special assessment" / "capital project" / "assessment" — note the dollar amount, scope, and whether approved or proposed
  • "Underlying mortgage" / "refinancing" — when does the building's mortgage mature? At what rate?
  • "Reserve fund" / "reserves" — current balance and trend
  • "Arrears" / "shareholders in arrears" — how many units are behind on maintenance? At >15%, the board may be near a credit crisis
  • "Maintenance increase" — frequency and size of recent increases. 3-5% annual is normal; 10%+ signals trouble

Building condition signals

  • "Facade" / "Local Law 11" — pending or in-progress facade work
  • "Boiler" / "heating system" — repairs or replacement discussions
  • "Elevator" — modernization, downtime, repair frequency
  • "Roof" — leaks, replacement, warranty status
  • "Water" — main breaks, pump replacements

Board dynamics signals

  • Multiple resignations in 12 months — board dysfunction
  • "Vote" / "tied" / "abstained" — frequent split votes mean the board can't get things done
  • "Counsel" / "attorney" — repeated reference to outside counsel hints at active disputes
  • "Rejected applicant" — read between the lines on rejection rationale; pickier boards = harder exit later

Litigation signals

  • "Lawsuit" / "litigation" / "settled" — get the docket numbers and have your attorney pull the complaints
  • "Sponsor" / "punch list" — old new-construction defect claims against the original sponsor
  • "Shareholder dispute" — internal litigation; can drag on for years

Phase 3 — Building financials (2-3 years)

Your attorney will get the last 2-3 years of audited financials. The five line items to focus on:

  1. Operating expenses per unit per year — typical range is $8,000-$20,000 for a NYC pre-war building. >$25,000 is high; investigate.
  2. Reserve fund balance — should be at least 3 months of operating costs; ideally 6-12 months.
  3. Underlying mortgage balance + maturity + rate — if maturity is within 24 months and current market rate is higher than what they're locked in at, expect a maintenance hike when they refinance.
  4. Capital improvements in last 3 years — what they've actually invested in. Buildings that spend on roofs, boilers, and facades tend to have lower future assessments.
  5. Arrears (maintenance receivables) — how many units are behind. >10% is high; >15% is a financial crisis.

Phase 4 — The board package + interview

Co-op boards interview every prospective buyer. The interview is usually 30 minutes, ranges from formal to friendly, and the rejection rate varies wildly by building.

Public-record prep for the interview:

  • Know the building's open violation count cold — if asked "what concerns you about this building?" you can show you've done your homework
  • Have a thoughtful answer about how you'd respond to a special assessment of $X (where X is plausible for this building)
  • Know the maintenance increase pattern in the last 5 years and be comfortable with the trajectory
  • Don't bring violations as gotchas — bring them as informed-buyer signals

When to walk away

Walk before the application fee if:

  • Underlying mortgage matures in 12-18 months and the building hasn't started refinancing discussions
  • Reserve fund is less than 2 months operating cost
  • Two or more deal-killer signals from the list above
  • The building has open Class C violations across multiple units (board not managing)
  • You can't get past attorney → board secretary in 4 weeks (slow communication = slow approval)

Pull the building's public-record audit

The audit gives you the violation, lien, sales-history, and tax baseline. Combine that with the board minutes + financials and you have 90% of what you need to make a confident decision.

Run a free audit →

For the more general due-diligence frame, see our NYC building due-diligence checklist. For condo-specific signals, see pre-purchase NYC condo inspection checklist.

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