Book updated Jul 2026.
In FL, a community association manager runs the day-to-day affairs of planned communities, condominiums, and cooperatives through the community associations. The essential duties include performing the maintenance of the common properties, working with the homeowners and contractors, resolving disputes and complaints, and financial management.
The exam consists of MC questions administered in a computer-based testing format through Pearson VUE testing centers. Candidates have three hours to complete the test, and the questions are distributed across five main subject areas. The largest section is Procedure, accounting for 25% of the exam and covering meeting procedures, notice requirements, elections, recalls, and board operations. Law constitutes 20% of the exam and tests knowledge of Florida’s regulatory framework, including Chapter 617 (Not-for-Profit Corporate Act), Chapter 718 (Condominium Act), Chapter 719 (Cooperative Act), Chapter 720 (Homeowners’ Association Act), and Chapter 721 (Florida Vacation Plan and Timesharing Act), as well as federal laws such as the Fair Housing Act and Americans with Disabilities Act. Budget also accounts for 25% of the exam and covers budget creation, expenditure categories, reserve requirements, and assessment collection procedures. Insurance makes up 12% of the exam and covers property and liability coverage, flood insurance, fidelity bonding, and claims handling. The remaining 18% covers operations and other administrative topics.
We create these self-practice test questions module referencing the concepts and principles currently valid in the exam. Each question comes with an answer and a short explanation which aids you in seeking further study information. For purpose of exam readiness drilling, this product includes questions that have varying numbers of choices. Some have 2 while some have 5 or 6. We want to make sure these questions are tough enough to really test your readiness and draw your focus to the weak areas. Think of these as challenges presented to you so to assess your comprehension of the subject matters. The goal is to reinforce learning, to validate successful transference of knowledge and to identify areas of weakness that require remediation.



