What Is a Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS)?
If you're on a Florida condo board, you've probably seen this acronym -- in emails from your management company, on meeting agendas, in worried conversations between board members who aren't entirely sure what it means. Let's clear it up.
A Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) is a reserve study required by Florida law for condo and co-op buildings three or more habitable stories tall. It focuses on structural and life-safety components: the things that keep the building standing and keep people safe.
You might be thinking: isn't that just a reserve study? Not quite. A traditional reserve study covers everything your association maintains -- pools, elevators, landscaping, all of it. A SIRS is narrower. It looks at eight specific structural categories. A licensed engineer or architect inspects each one, estimates how many years of useful life remain, and calculates what repairs or replacement will cost.
What you get back is a document that tells your board what shape the building's structure is in and how much money you need set aside to maintain it.
Why SIRS exists
This requirement came out of the Champlain Towers South collapse in Surfside, Florida, in June 2021. A reserve study completed the year before found the building was only 6.9% funded -- about $706,000 in reserves against a recommended $10.3 million. The structure needed work. The money wasn't there.
Florida's legislature responded with SB 4-D in 2022, creating the SIRS mandate. Buildings should know what condition their structure is in and have the money to fix what's found. That's the whole idea.
What a SIRS covers
Eight categories:
- Roof
- Structure -- load-bearing walls and primary structural systems
- Fireproofing and fire protection systems
- Plumbing
- Electrical systems
- Waterproofing and exterior painting
- Windows and exterior doors
- Any other item with deferred maintenance or replacement cost exceeding $25,000 that affects the components above
For each one, your engineer estimates remaining useful life and projected replacement cost. Starting in 2026, cost estimates for items over $25,000 must include inflation -- no more using today's dollars for work that's a decade out.
One bit of flexibility: components with 25 or more years of remaining useful life don't require mandatory funding. The SIRS may recommend that reserves be maintained, but the law gives boards room on items that aren't close to end of life.
Who needs one
Any residential condominium association with buildings three or more habitable stories in height. That word -- habitable -- is the key. HB 913, passed in 2025, clarified that parking garages and mechanical floors don't count toward the threshold. Three habitable stories is the line.
Every qualifying building on the property needs its own SIRS. Got a five-story tower and a two-story amenity building? Only the tower.
The requirement doesn't apply to buildings under three habitable stories, single-family homes through fourplexes, or components maintained by someone other than the association. If you're not sure whether your building qualifies, check your condominium documents and ask your engineer.
How it's different from a regular reserve study
Two different animals.
A traditional reserve study covers all common elements -- elevators, HVAC, pools, landscaping, parking lots, clubhouse. Not mandated by state law. No licensing requirement for who does it. Owners can vote to waive the funding.
A SIRS covers only the eight structural and life-safety categories above. Mandated by Florida Statute §718.112(2)(g) for qualifying buildings. Must be done by a licensed engineer or architect. Reserves for SIRS items cannot be waived or redirected.
Most buildings need both. SIRS handles structural safety and legal compliance. The traditional study handles everything else.
What to do after you get yours
Your SIRS report tells you what each structural component will cost and when that cost arrives. The next step is a funding plan -- right amount into reserves each year so the money is there when the work comes due.
Starting January 1, 2026, this funding is mandatory. Associations can no longer waive reserves for SIRS items. The funding plan isn't optional.
Reserves Pro helps boards project SIRS findings over a 30-year timeline, showing how much goes into reserves each year to stay fully funded. When you can see the trajectory, setting the right contribution level is math instead of guesswork.
For the full compliance walkthrough -- deadlines, funding rules, hiring tips, and FAQ -- read Florida SIRS Compliance: What Your Condo Board Needs to Know in 2026.
This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. For questions about your specific building's SIRS obligations, consult a Florida attorney who specializes in community association law.