Minnesota HOA Law · Plain English
SF 1750: What Minnesota's New HOA Law Means for Your Board
You didn't join your board to become a procurement officer. This page explains what SF 1750 requires, in the words a volunteer board member would use. Then it walks you step by step from "we just heard about this" to compliant.
The Short Version
What SF 1750 requires, in plain English
SF 1750 is Minnesota's response to years of complaints about how homeowners associations spend their owners' money. The theme running through the whole law is simple: when a board spends significant association money, the process has to be open, competitive, and free of self-dealing — and the board has to be able to prove it.
In practice, that breaks down into a few core duties:
- Competitive bidding on significant contracts. Above a dollar threshold, the association can't just hand work to a favorite vendor. It must solicit competing bids through a fair process.
- Conflict-of-interest rules with teeth. People who profit from a decision can't be the ones steering it. A manager who runs your bid process and also earns money from the winning project — for example, a percentage-of-project fee — is exactly the arrangement the law targets. Board members with a financial interest in a vendor have their own disclosure and recusal duties.
- Documentation you can produce. Bids received, how they were opened and compared, who voted and how, what was disclosed. If it isn't written down, as far as an auditor or a court is concerned, it didn't happen.
- Transparency to owners. Owners get more rights to see how their money moves — which means a sloppy process that used to stay invisible no longer will.
None of this is exotic. It's how public agencies and well-run commercial property owners have bought construction work for decades. What's new is that volunteer HOA boards are now held to that standard — whether or not anyone on the board has ever run a bid.
Scope
Does SF 1750 apply to my association?
If your association is a Minnesota common interest community — a condominium, townhome, or planned community governed by an association that collects assessments — you should assume the law applies to you and confirm the details with your attorney. In particular:
- Size doesn't exempt you. Small, self-managed associations are not carved out just for being small. A 24-unit townhome association replacing its roofs faces the same bidding duties as a 400-unit high-rise.
- Self-managed doesn't exempt you. No management company means the board itself carries every duty the law assigns.
- Professional management doesn't cover you. Having a manager doesn't transfer the board's legal responsibility — and in some arrangements, the manager's role in projects is now part of the problem the board must fix.
Not sure where your association lands? That's a five-minute phone call: (612) 248-6535. We'll tell you honestly, including if the answer is "you're fine."
Right Now
What your board needs to do now
Before anything else, get these basics in motion. Each item is expanded in the step-by-step walkthrough further down the page.
- Put SF 1750 on your next board meeting agenda and record in the minutes that the board is addressing it.
- List every current contract and service relationship the association has — management, landscaping, snow, maintenance, insurance, upcoming projects.
- Identify which contracts and upcoming projects are over the competitive-bid threshold.
- Ask, in writing, whether anyone who influences your vendor decisions earns money from those decisions — your manager included.
- Have each board member disclose any financial or family relationship with any association vendor.
- Locate your bid records for recent large projects. If there are none, note that honestly — it defines your starting point.
- Talk to your association attorney about effective dates and what applies to contracts already signed.
- Download the full compliance checklist below and work through it as a board.
The Full Path
From "we just learned about SF 1750" to compliant — step by step
This walkthrough is built to answer the common questions before anyone has to call. Each step says what to do, why the law requires it, and what document or decision it produces. Work them in order; each one feeds the next.
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Acknowledge the law and assign an owner
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Inventory every contract and vendor relationship
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Flag everything over the bid threshold
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Map the conflicts of interest
Where the conflict gets fixed: if this step reveals that the person running your bids profits from the result, the fix isn't firing anyone — it's moving the bid process to a party with no stake in the outcome. That's what independent bid administration exists for, and it's why management companies hand this work to us rather than absorb the liability.
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Adopt a written procurement and conflict policy
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Run your first compliant competitive bid
Conflict check: whoever administers this bid must not profit from its outcome. If your manager or a board member's company wants to bid the work, they can — but then they cannot also run the process. An independent administrator keeps the wall clean. Here's how we run it.
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Fix the documentation habit
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Verify with your attorney and put compliance on a calendar
Want a second set of eyes first? An SF 1750 compliance audit walks your actual records through all eight steps and hands you the gap list before your attorney bills an hour.
Common Questions
SF 1750 questions Minnesota board members actually ask
If a contract or project will cost more than the statutory threshold — commonly discussed as $50,000 — you should assume the competitive-bid requirement applies and confirm the exact figure and its mechanics with your attorney, because how multi-year contracts and change orders count toward the line matters as much as the number itself.
Two cautions from the field: don't split one project into smaller contracts to stay under the line (that pattern is obvious in hindsight and looks worse than not bidding at all), and remember that a "small" contract that renews for years can cross the threshold in total value.
Broader than most boards expect. It isn't just signed construction agreements — service agreements, management contracts, maintenance arrangements, and ongoing vendor relationships are all contracts, whether or not anyone ever printed a formal document. If the association is obligated to pay someone for goods or work, treat it as a contract for inventory purposes and let your attorney tell you which ones the statute reaches.
Emergency work that protects people or prevents further damage — tarping a torn-open roof, boarding windows, stopping active water intrusion — is generally treated differently from planned work, because competitive bidding takes time an emergency doesn't give you.
The trap is scope creep: the emergency covers the tarp, not the full roof replacement that follows. Once the property is stabilized, the permanent repair is a planned project and belongs in a normal bid process. Document the emergency (photos, dates, invoices) so the file shows where the emergency ended and the project began. Our pre-claim advisory work covers exactly this situation.
If a board member (or their family or business) stands to make money from a decision, the safe pattern is: disclose the interest in writing, stay out of the discussion and the vote, and make sure the minutes show both. That protects the board member as much as the association — a disclosed, recused conflict is a footnote; a hidden one is a lawsuit.
Recusal doesn't mean a board member's company can never work for the association — it means they can't sit on both sides of the table for that decision.
No. We're consultants, not lawyers, and this page is general information written to help volunteer board members understand the landscape. Statutes have exact words, effective dates, and exceptions that only your association's attorney should interpret for your situation. We work alongside association attorneys constantly — we handle the operational side (bids, oversight, documentation), they handle the legal side. You want both.
Free Download
Get the SF 1750 Compliance Checklist
The full checklist from this page as a printable PDF your whole board can work through at one meeting. Enter your email and we'll send it over.
We send the checklist and occasional plain-English updates on Minnesota HOA rules. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
Go Deeper
More SF 1750 answers
Does the $50,000 bid rule apply to your association?
Why "small" doesn't mean "exempt," and the three ways boards get surprised by the line — multi-year totals, change orders, and split projects.
Storm damage: what your board can do right now
What you can order immediately, where the emergency ends and the planned project begins, and the paper trail that protects you.
An honest note: this page is general information, not legal advice. Statutory details — dollar thresholds, effective dates, exceptions — must be confirmed against the enacted law by your association's attorney. We work alongside your attorney, not in place of one: they interpret the law, we build and run the processes that satisfy it.
Still have a question this page didn't answer?
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