Questions
What is the condominium no-debt declaration?
What article 1424-A says about condominium charges and debt declarations, the 10-day deadline, and unit sale.
It is the written declaration under article 1424-A for selling a unit. It must state current condominium charges, their nature, amounts and payment deadlines and, if debts exist, their nature and due dates. The administrator must issue it within 10 days after the request.
Condo brings unit, balance, approved charges, debts, deadlines, and payment history together so the declaration is not assembled from scattered spreadsheets.
What this means
Article 1424-A created the written declaration for unit sale: current condominium charges, nature, amounts, deadlines, and existing debts with creation and due dates. It is mandatory for the deed or authenticated document unless the buyer expressly waives it and assumes responsibility. Condo helps issue it with auditable balances, notices, minutes, and payments.
Points to confirm
- Article 1424-A requires current charges, amounts, nature, and deadlines.
- If debts exist, the declaration should state nature, amounts, and due dates.
In the operation
The owner is selling. The administration opens the unit, confirms paid fees, approved future charges, and existing debts before issuing the declaration.
Trust risk
If the administration delays or issues an incomplete declaration, the sale can stall and debt responsibility moves without clear context.
Sources
See Condo in operation
Show a unit with balance, future charges, debts, and history ready for declaration.
In the demo, we use a real workflow to show how fees, bank records, receipts, documents, and communication stay in the same context.
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