CIC, SRPD & Required Disclosures

RPA — Pages 5-6

Contract — Pages 5-6: CIC & Disclosures

HOA Resale package timeline, SRPD, LBPD for pre-1978 homes.

On homes with an HOA, the Seller must provide an HOA Resale Package by day 15.
The buyer signs the Resale Receipt and has five (5) days to review and accept or cancel — Nevada STATE LAW.

Any questions the buyer has, they need to direct to the HOA. We are simply document delivery, not the HOA’s interpreter.

Who pays: Sellers traditionally pay all fees. High-rises buyers and new builds buyers typically pay Cap Contribution — usually 2-3× the HOA fee, or a % of the sale price each time it’s sold. Verify with the HOA.

Why this matters

By state law, the buyer has 5 days from receiving the resale package to back out. If the seller delivers late, the buyer’s review window extends — which can break the close-of-escrow date.

Within five (5) days per Line 2 — the seller MUST deliver disclosures.

LINE 5 — SRPD REQUIRED. Seller cannot ask the buyer to waive it or sign a remedy in lieu of disclosure. Nevada state law.

LINE 8 — Review SRPD See if anything material needs follow-up after the contract is executed.

LINE 10 — LBPD (Lead-Based Paint Disclosure) Required if home built BEFORE 1978. Federal law. Must be fully executed.

LINE 13 — Additional Buyer-Requested Items If property is tenant-occupied, write: “All leases, property management contracts, maintenance, and utility records.”

Why this matters

SRPD is mandatory under Nevada state law — a seller asking to waive it is asking the buyer to give up legal protection. LBPD for pre-1978 homes is federal law (HUD); missing this exposes the brokerage to a federal violation. Tenant-occupied properties come with leases and obligations that transfer at close — without them in writing, the buyer inherits unknown problems.