Instead of re-booking inspections and sweeps unit by unit, year by year, a maintenance contract sets a recurring schedule across your whole property, so units cycle through inspection and service automatically and your team gets one consolidated report instead of a dozen separate invoices.
How this typically works
Portfolio assessment
We start with a walkthrough of your units or common-area fireplaces to understand the full scope.
Recurring schedule
Units are batched into an annual or seasonal service cycle that respects tenant access windows.
Consolidated reporting
One report per cycle covering the whole portfolio, not per-unit paperwork you have to compile yourself.
Predictable cost
Contract pricing across a known scope of units, rather than re-quoting every year.
What a contract typically includes
Frequently asked questions
How many units or properties do you need to make this worthwhile?
There’s no strict minimum, but the coordination benefit becomes especially clear once you’re managing more than a handful of units or a shared amenity space.
Can this cover common-area fireplaces only, not individual units?
Yes, some HOA contracts are scoped just to clubhouse, amenity, or common-area fireplaces rather than every unit in the community.
What happens if a unit needs repair beyond the covered maintenance?
We’ll flag it during the inspection and provide a separate quote for that specific repair, keeping the base contract focused on routine maintenance.
How is billing structured?
Typically an annual or multi-year contract rate based on the number of units or fireplaces covered, agreed upfront so there are no surprises.