The Japanese government is planning to revise its law on condominiums—Act No. 69 of 1962: “Law Concerning Sectional Ownership of Buildings” (Japanese)—to make it easier for homeowners’ associations to gain approval for large-scale renovations of buildings.
There are hundreds of buildings throughout the country that need to be renovated, but the current legal framework deters an efficient and straightforward approval process. The projected legal amendments would lower the minimum approval threshold for large-scale repair plans, institute a continuous proxy system for non-resident owners and enable a court-appointed representative to decide for condo owners who cannot be located.
The Legislative Council of the Ministry of Justice issued its recommendations for amending the law on June 8, and a public comment period will begin next month—with the goal of passing the revised law in 2024.
The Price of Repairs
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When buying a condominium, one of the first questions most people ask concerns the building repair reserve. Due to the surging cost of construction materials and labor over the last 10 years, it is rare to find a repair reserve that doesn’t need to be topped up by owners before a large-scale renovation can be carried out—on average major repairs usually cost in the ¥750,000 to ¥1,000,000 range per condo unit. Nevertheless, even for buildings with sufficient repair reserves, there can be other important risks when buying a condominium here.
Renovation Plans and Challenges
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Nevertheless, according to a recent survey of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, nearly 30% of all condo buildings average less than 70% attendance at their homeowners’ association meetings. Consequently, if you buy into the wrong building, you may, for example, have to put up with water leaks in your building’s common areas since owners not in attendance are deemed to vote against any repair plan.
Changing The Status Quo
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In this case, it may be possible for owners merely attending the meeting to pass a valid resolution. This means that in the future, depending on the contents of the building management rules, it may even become possible for a simple majority attending a meeting to pass a large-scale renovation plan. All of this points to it becoming more likely after next year for important condominium resolutions to be passed without everyone’s input.
As an unsuspecting owner, in the future, you may suddenly find you must pay for a major repair plan you didn’t vote on or have to top up the repair reserve when you least expect it. Without question, reading the building management rules carefully before purchasing your condominium will take on more importance once the law is changed.
Jeff Wynkoop is a fully bilingual certified real estate broker with over 15 years of experience working in the Japanese real estate business. He is a U.S. attorney (Washington), U.S. CPA (Delaware), U.S. CCIM, ARES Japan Master and author of “Legal Issues in Japanese Real Estate Investment.” Please feel free to contact him for real estate brokerage and consulting at bilingualjapanagent@gmail.com.
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