Free tools for self-managing boards.
Plain, practical tools for volunteer boards figuring out the management-company decision — free to use, no account needed. All three live right here.
Management fee calculator.
See what your management company really costs per year, per unit, and over 3–5 years — with an honest comparison to self-managing.
Enter your management fee to see your numbers.
Want a copy of your numbers, plus a plain-English transition checklist?
Prefer a dedicated page with the full breakdown and FAQ? Open the fee calculator page →
Should your board self-manage?
Seven honest questions, scored across the five areas that actually determine readiness — bandwidth, documents, bookkeeping, vendors, and compliance.
How many units does your community have?
Draft your management-transition notice.
Upload your signed management agreement and BoardPath reads the termination clause and drafts a matching notice — or use the generic fillable version. Read the clause on screen, copy the draft text, or download it as a ready-to-send .docx — all available now.
Draft your management-company termination or non-renewal notice.
Free, no signup required. Upload your signed management agreement and BoardPath reads the actual termination clause and drafts a notice that matches it — or use the generic fillable version if you don’t have your contract handy.
This is not legal advice. BoardPath is not a law firm and does not represent you. This tool drafts a notice based on the information you provide and, where you’ve uploaded one, what your management agreement appears to say — it does not tell you what your agreement legally requires or guarantee the notice is valid or sufficient. Termination and non-renewal rules vary by contract and by state. Review the draft carefully and confirm with a licensed attorney before sending it.
These tools answer the money question. BoardPath answers the rules question.
Once you know what you’re paying and what leaving would take, the next question is usually: can we actually run this ourselves? BoardPath reads your governing documents and state law and answers that, cited to the section — so your board never has to guess.