HOA Management Built for Howard County Boards
If you sit on an HOA board in Howard County, the work is harder than most owners realize. You are a volunteer with fiduciary duty over a multi-million-dollar shared asset, you answer to neighbors who voted you in, and you operate inside a layered governance structure that can include a village association, a master association, and the Maryland Homeowners Association Act on top of it all. Howard County HOA management has to start there — with the board’s actual job — not with a brochure.
West Property Management works directly for boards. Owner Chris Westerlund built the firm around disciplined operations, transparent finances, and a refusal to hide behind soft answers. We currently manage more than $2 billion in assets and 4,000+ properties across Maryland, and our office sits at 13390 Clarksville Pike in Highland — five minutes from most of the HOAs we serve in this county.
What makes HOA management in Howard County different
The Maryland Homeowners Association Act (Md. Code, Real Property Article §11B-101 et seq.) governs every HOA in this state. It sets the rules for board elections, owner access to records, open meetings, the resale disclosure package you must produce when a home in your community sells, and the procedural duties your board owes to the membership. The Maryland Contract Lien Act governs how unpaid assessments are pursued. Reserve study expectations, while not yet uniformly mandated for older communities, are increasingly the standard a competent board is held to — and lenders, insurers, and resale buyers are starting to ask for them by name.
Howard County adds a layer no other Maryland county has: Columbia.
Columbia is one of the largest planned communities in the United States, and its governance is structured in two tiers. The Columbia Association (CA) sits at the master level and collects an annual assessment from every owner inside Columbia. Underneath sit ten village associations — Long Reach, Wilde Lake, Owen Brown, Harper’s Choice, Dorsey’s Search, Hickory Ridge, River Hill, Kings Contrivance, Town Center, and Oakland Mills — each with its own board, covenants, and architectural review process. Many neighborhoods within those villages then operate their own sub-associations on top. Board members in Columbia routinely have to coordinate decisions, communication, and enforcement across two or three governance layers at once. That complexity is real, and it does not exist in the same form in Baltimore County or anywhere else in the state.
Outside Columbia, Howard County HOAs look different but are no less demanding. Maple Lawn in Fulton is a mixed-use master-planned community with multiple sub-HOAs and a commercial component layered into the residential plan. The Cattail Creek corridor and the broader Glenwood area lean toward larger-lot HOAs with private road and stormwater obligations. Highland and Clarksville HOAs tend to be smaller and more closely held. Ellicott City HOAs — particularly those in or near the historic district — carry the additional weight of flood-recovery questions that became unavoidable after the 2016 and 2018 events.
How West Property Management serves Howard County HOAs
Good Howard County HOA management is not a checklist — it is a standard the board can hold the manager to. We anchor every engagement to seven principles. These five carry the most weight for HOA boards.
Financial discipline
Reserves are where boards get into trouble — usually slowly, then suddenly. We produce monthly financials a board treasurer can actually read, separate operating and reserve accounts at FDIC-insured institutions with documented signing authority, and align the annual budget to the most recent reserve study so the funding plan is honest. When the auditor arrives, the file is ready.
Relentless communication
Boards get blindsided when they hear about problems from a homeowner instead of their manager. We set a written reporting cadence with every board — what arrives weekly, what arrives monthly, and what triggers a same-day call. Resident communication runs on the same standard: covenant notices, meeting notices, and assessment notices go out on time and in the form the Maryland HOA Act requires.
Proactive management
The cheapest dollar a community ever spends is the one spent before a failure. We track reserve study replacement dates against actual asset condition, log vendor performance, and walk the property on a schedule the board sets. Deferred maintenance is a financial decision disguised as an operational one, and we treat it that way.
Integrity in every decision
Covenant enforcement is where boards lose neighbors and lawsuits get filed. We apply the rules the same way for every owner, document each step, and bring the board the recommendation that holds up to scrutiny — not the easy one. Fiduciary duty is the standard; we work to it.
Accountability without excuses
When something goes wrong, the board hears it from us first, with what we already did about it. That is the standard.
Communities and property types we serve in Howard County
We work with HOAs across the county, including:
- Columbia villages and their sub-associations — Long Reach, Wilde Lake, Owen Brown, Harper’s Choice, Dorsey’s Search, Hickory Ridge, River Hill, Kings Contrivance, Town Center, Oakland Mills
- Maple Lawn (Fulton) master and sub-HOA structures, including mixed-use governance
- Cattail Creek and the broader Glenwood corridor — larger-lot communities with private infrastructure
- Highland and Clarksville HOAs — smaller, closely-held communities
- Ellicott City HOAs — historic-district and modern, including post-flood recovery considerations
- West Friendship, Dayton, and Cooksville rural-residential HOAs
Property types include single-family-detached HOAs, townhome HOAs, mixed master/sub structures, age-restricted (55+) communities, and HOAs with private roads, stormwater facilities, pools, or clubhouses on the books.
Frequently asked questions
How does West Property Management handle the layered governance in Columbia?
We document where a decision lives before we make it. For a community inside a Columbia village, that means knowing which covenants and which architectural review process apply at the village level, what the Columbia Association handles at the master level, and what your sub-association actually controls. Boards get a written map of that on day one.
What does a reserve study cost, and how often should we update it?
A new full reserve study for a typical Howard County HOA usually runs in the low-to-mid four figures, with updates every three to five years and a financial-only refresh annually. The cost of not having a current study shows up later as a special assessment — which is the conversation no board wants to have with their neighbors.
How quickly can you turn around a resale disclosure package?
Maryland law sets the timeline and the package contents, and we treat it as a hard deadline, not a target. Sellers and title companies receive a complete, compliant package inside the statutory window every time.
What does a board meeting actually look like with West Property managing the community?
Agenda and packet to the board several days ahead, manager’s report in writing, financials reviewed against budget and reserves, action items captured with owners and dates, draft minutes back to the board within a week. The board runs the meeting; we run the operation behind it.
Talk to us about your community
If your board is reviewing options for Howard County HOA management, start with a 30-minute board consultation or a written RFP packet. We’ll review your current management, governing documents, and reserve position, and tell you straight whether we’re the right fit.
Call (301) 854-0791 or schedule a board consultation.
West Property Management — 13390 Clarksville Pike, Highland, MD 20777.
Stronger Communities. Protected Assets. Lasting Value. — That’s the West Standard.
We do more than just collect rent
West Property Management offers complete management services from townhomes and single-family homes to Homeowners & Condominium Associations, no matter the size.
+$2 Billion
In Assets Managed
+4,000
Properties Represented
Across Maryland



