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SIRS Compliance Deadlines: What Florida Boards Need to Know

If your building needs a SIRS, the deadlines aren't suggestions. Missing them is a breach of fiduciary duty by the board. Here's every date that matters, what happens at each one, and what to do if you're already behind.

The full timeline

  • December 31, 2025 -- Initial SIRS must be completed
  • December 31, 2026 -- Final deadline if coordinating with a milestone inspection
  • January 1, 2026 -- Mandatory reserve funding begins
  • 45 days after receiving SIRS -- Report submitted to DBPR
  • Every 10 years -- SIRS must be repeated

December 31, 2025: Initial SIRS completion

This is the big one. Unit owner-controlled associations that existed on or before July 1, 2022 must have their first SIRS completed by this date.

"Completed" means the licensed engineer or architect has finished the study and delivered it to the association. You don't need to have acted on every finding by December 31 -- you need the study in hand.

If your association was created after July 1, 2022, your timeline depends on when the building was completed and when owners took control from the developer. Check with your management company or attorney.

December 31, 2026: Milestone coordination

Some buildings also face a milestone inspection -- a separate structural inspection for buildings 30 years or older (25 if within three miles of the coast). If yours is due on or before December 31, 2026, Florida law lets you coordinate the SIRS with that inspection and deliver both together.

This is the only way to push the SIRS past December 31, 2025. And even then, the SIRS can't extend past December 31, 2026. No exceptions.

No milestone inspection due in that window? This doesn't apply. Your deadline stays at December 31, 2025.

January 1, 2026: Mandatory reserve funding

This is the one that hits your budget. Starting January 1, 2026, associations must fund reserves based on their SIRS findings.

Two rules kick in:

No waivers. Owners can no longer vote to skip or reduce funding for SIRS items. Associations that adopted budgets before December 31, 2024 could still waive under their existing cycle. After that cutoff, the option closed.

No redirecting. SIRS reserves can't be used for other purposes. The roof fund stays the roof fund.

Your 2026 budget and every budget after must include reserve contributions based on what your SIRS found. If your building has been underfunding reserves, January 2026 is when that changes whether the board is ready or not.

45 days: DBPR reporting

Within 45 days of receiving your completed SIRS, submit the SIRS Reporting Form electronically to DBPR through your online account.

The Division checks that the study was done by a licensed professional. They don't review the substance of the findings. But skipping the filing is still a compliance issue. Get it done.

Every 10 years: The cycle continues

After the initial SIRS, a new one is required at least every decade. This runs from the condominium's creation, not from when you completed the first study.

Plan for it. Your second SIRS is coming, and the funding requirements don't pause between studies.

What if you've already missed a deadline

If your association passed December 31, 2025 without a completed SIRS, act now.

Non-compliance is a breach of fiduciary duty. Individual board members face potential liability. The longer the gap, the bigger the exposure.

Get a licensed engineer or architect engaged immediately. Commission the study. Document everything -- when you hired the firm, when the inspection happened, when you received the report. That paper trail shows good faith if anyone questions compliance later.

Once you have the completed SIRS, submit it to DBPR within 45 days and start funding reserves based on the findings. Don't wait for the next budget cycle -- the mandatory funding requirement is already in effect.

For complex situations, talk to a Florida community association attorney who can advise on liability and next steps.

Next steps

For the full compliance guide -- what SIRS covers, who needs one, funding rules, and FAQ -- read Florida SIRS Compliance: What Your Condo Board Needs to Know in 2026.

Got your SIRS report? Reserves Pro projects findings over a 30-year timeline so you can see how much goes into reserves each year and stay ahead of every deadline on this list.


This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. For questions about your association's specific deadlines, consult a Florida attorney who specializes in community association law.

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