
Exempt from SB 326 Balcony Inspections? Brace for Million-Dollar Liability
Skipping or delaying SB 326 inspections can trigger lawsuits, loan denials, insurance cancellations, special assessments, and falling property values. If you manage or live in a California condo community, compliance is not optional.
What Is SB 326 and Who Must Comply
Purpose: Prevent structural failures of Exterior Elevated Elements (EEEs) in condo communities.
Applies to: Condo HOAs with buildings of 3+ units.
Elements covered: Balconies, decks, walkways, stairways, catwalks, and other wood-supported structures 6+ feet above grade.
Key compliance points
- First inspection deadline: January 1, 2025
- Ongoing cycle: Every 9 years after the initial inspection
- Qualified inspectors: Licensed structural engineers or architects
- Mandatory reporting: Unsafe conditions reported to HOA and local building department within 15 days
- Immediate hazards: Block access until repairs are completed
- Documentation: Include reports in the reserve study and retain for 18 years
Context: SB 326 was passed in 2019 after the 2015 Berkeley collapse, where water intrusion and hidden rot destroyed balcony supports.
Why Skipping SB 326 Is a Financial Disaster
1. Catastrophic injury and wrongful death lawsuits
- Severe injuries or fatalities lead to multi-million-dollar claims
- Potential defendants: HOA, board members (personal exposure via negligence claims), and unit owners collectively
- Case in point: Berkeley 2015 led to settlements and damages exceeding $20M
2. Insurance coverage gaps and policy cancellations
- Coverage denial: Non-compliance can be treated as negligence
- Non-renewals or big premium hikes: Many carriers now require inspection reports to renew
- Conditional coverage: Renewal only if inspections and repairs are documented
- Ripple effect: Loss of master policy can trigger loan defaults for financed units
3. Lender scrutiny and loan denials
- Many lenders treat SB 326 compliance as a prerequisite
- No inspection, no loan: Units may become unsellable unless purchased with cash
- Repairs required: Hazards must be repaired or fully funded before closing
- Refi impact: Owners can fail to refinance if the HOA is out of compliance
4. Special assessments and financial shock
- Emergency repairs: Cities can issue safety orders or red-tag areas
- Special assessments: Often $5,000–$20,000+ per owner when planning is absent
- Higher dues: Ongoing increases to cover repairs, insurance, and future inspections
The Million-Dollar Liability Chain Reaction
- Hidden moisture damage worsens over time
- Balcony or walkway fails and causes injury or death
- Lawsuits target HOA, board, and owners collectively
- Insurer denies coverage due to negligence
- Judgments or settlements reach seven figures
- Lenders blacklist the property and escrows fail
- Property values drop across the community
Proactive Compliance: How to Protect Your HOA
Action plan
- Schedule early: Do not wait for the 2025 deadline, inspection capacity will be tight
- Budget repairs: Allocate reserves or plan special assessments for structural work
- Document everything: Keep reports, invoices, and photos for insurers, lenders, and transactions
- Communicate with owners: Share timelines, access needs, and cost expectations
- Coordinate with lenders and insurers: Provide documentation to prevent gaps in coverage or financing
Real-World Cases to Learn From
Location |
Year |
What happened |
Casualties |
Payout / Verdict |
Berkeley, CA |
2015 |
5th-floor balcony collapse |
6 dead, 7 critically hurt |
≈ $20M+ partial + confidential |
San Francisco, CA |
1998 |
4th-floor balcony collapse |
1 dead, 1 permanent injury |
$12.39M jury award |
Montgomery, AL |
2012 |
Party balcony collapse |
8 injured |
> $20M + $250K punitive |
Chicago, IL |
2003 |
2nd/3rd-floor porch collapse |
13 dead, 57 injured |
≈ $16.6M global settlement |
Malibu, CA |
2021 |
Beach-house balcony collapse |
~9 injured |
No suits reported yet |
Malibu, CA |
1992 |
Beachfront balcony collapse |
2 dead, ~29 injured |
No suits reported |
Chicago, IL |
~2011 |
Balcony railing failure |
1 catastrophic injury |
$4.5M settlement |
Four Hard-Hitting Lessons for California Communities
- Multi-million verdicts are common and can bankrupt small HOAs
- Insurance may not save you if you are out of compliance
- Danger is often invisible under paint and stucco, invasive methods matter
- Fines add up on top of lawsuits, lost rent, and emergency repairs
Why AI-Assisted Inspections Help
- Find hidden decay: High-resolution imagery and moisture sensing detect early problems
- Reduce cost and time: More efficient fieldwork and reporting
- City-ready reports: Digital, stamped, and defensible in audits or legal settings
Ready to Remove “Future Lawsuit” From Your To-Do List
Book an AI-assisted balcony inspection with statewide availability and no repair upsell
Free Compliance Toolkit checklist, budget planner, tenant notice, HOA resolution
Call: 805-312-8508
Schedule: DrBalcony.com
Do not wait for headlines. Act now, stay compliant, and protect every resident in your community.