Expert HOA & COA Management in Ventura County
Davis-Stirling and SB 326 — Conejo Valley, Simi Valley, and the coastal corridor. Flat-fee pricing and 48-hour board response.
Ventura County sits at the northwestern edge of the greater Los Angeles area — close enough to benefit from LA’s economic engine, distinct enough to have developed its own residential character. The county’s HOA and COA market reflects that duality. The Conejo Valley cities of Thousand Oaks, Moorpark, and Newbury Park are home to large, established master-planned communities with mature governance structures and high board engagement. Simi Valley combines well-established residential associations with active new development. The coastal corridor from Camarillo through Oxnard and San Buenaventura has a growing condominium association market alongside established single-family HOAs.
Every Ventura County community association is governed by the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act — California’s comprehensive HOA statute covering financial disclosures, elections, enforcement, meeting requirements, and reserve fund obligations. Condominium associations with three or more units also carry SB 326 balcony and exterior elevated element inspection requirements. AmLo’s California team manages all Davis-Stirling and SB 326 compliance obligations as part of standard management.
AmLo serves Ventura County from its Marina del Rey office. The county’s communities are squarely within our active service area — we are physically present in Southern California, not managing Ventura County associations from a distant state or remote office.
Marina Del Rey, CA 90292
Fire Zone Compliance: Many Ventura County communities — particularly in Simi Valley’s Santa Susana Mountain foothills, Thousand Oaks brush interface areas, Oak Park, and the Ojai Valley — carry Cal Fire and local fire department vegetation management obligations under California Civil Code §4725. AmLo tracks brush clearance requirements and coordinates compliance for affected communities as part of standard management.
The Conejo Valley is Ventura County’s most active HOA market — home to Thousand Oaks, one of Southern California’s largest master-planned residential environments. Large established communities like North Ranch, Dos Vientos Ranch, and Bell Canyon operate alongside newer associations in Oak Park and Lake Sherwood. Boards here tend to be experienced, financially engaged, and focused on reserve fund health and vendor accountability. Westlake Village straddles the LA-Ventura county line and brings a premium condominium and HOA market to the eastern edge of the valley.
Simi Valley is Ventura County’s second-largest city and one of its most active HOA markets — a community where Wood Ranch’s premium master-planned neighborhoods, Big Sky’s newer developments, and Simi Valley East’s established associations create governance needs spanning the full community maturity spectrum. Fire zone vegetation management obligations for valley communities adjacent to the Santa Susana Mountains, premium reserve planning for Wood Ranch’s residential character, and first-generation board support for newer developments are the defining management challenges here.
The coastal corridor runs from Oxnard and Port Hueneme north through San Buenaventura (Ventura city) to the eastern edge of the county. Oxnard has one of Ventura County’s largest condominium association markets, with significant SB 326 inspection exposure in its coastal building stock. Ventura city’s downtown and beach-adjacent COAs carry similar obligations. Saticoy and El Rio are established residential HOA communities in the Oxnard Plain.
Camarillo is one of Ventura County’s most active planned community markets — Mission Oaks, Camarillo Springs, and numerous master-planned residential tracts create a dense HOA environment with experienced boards and active governance needs. Moorpark’s rapid growth in recent years has produced a wave of newer associations alongside its established residential communities. Somis is a smaller agricultural-adjacent community with a distinctive rural HOA character.
The inland eastern corridor of Ventura County — Ojai, Oak View, Santa Paula, Fillmore, and Piru — is a mix of smaller residential HOAs, rural planned communities, and agricultural-adjacent associations. Ojai’s premium property values and engaged community character produce associations with high governance expectations despite their relatively smaller size. Santa Paula and Fillmore have established residential HOAs formed primarily in the 1980s and 1990s that are now approaching or past their first major capital project cycles.
Marina del Rey Office — Southern California Based
AmLo’s California office is in Marina del Rey. Ventura County communities are within our active service area. We are physically present in Southern California — not managing Ventura associations remotely from another region.
Davis-Stirling & SB 326 Specialists
Every Ventura County board operates under Davis-Stirling. Condominium associations face SB 326 balcony inspection obligations on top of that. AmLo manages both as standard — no last-minute compliance scrambles, no missed deadlines.
Fire Zone Compliance Tracking
Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Oak Park, and the Ojai Valley all have communities with Cal Fire and local brush clearance obligations. AmLo tracks these requirements and coordinates compliance for affected Ventura County associations at no additional charge.
Real-Time Board Visibility Through Our Portal
Ventura County boards see every invoice, every work order, and every homeowner communication in real time through our board portal without waiting for a monthly PDF or calling to ask what is happening.
Flat Fee — No Hidden Charges
One monthly fee covers everything. No per-page charges, no postage surcharges, no vendor markups. Ventura County boards switching to AmLo consistently find their prior manager’s real annual cost was higher than they understood it to be.
48-Hour Board Response
Every board inquiry receives a substantive response within 48 hours. Not a ticket confirmation — an actual response. Ventura County boards used to slow communication and impersonal service notice the difference from the first week.
SB 326: What California Condo Boards Need to Know About Balcony Inspections
Inspection deadlines, scope, documentation requirements, and how Ventura County condo boards coordinate compliance.
HOA Rule Enforcement Under Davis-Stirling: A California Board Guide
How to issue violations, conduct hearings, impose fines, and stay compliant with California’s enforcement procedures.
HOA Reserve Fund 101: What Every Board Member Should Know
Reserve fund basics, how Davis-Stirling shapes reserve study requirements, and what underfunded reserves mean for Ventura County communities.
HOA Special Assessments: What California Boards Need to Know
When special assessments are appropriate, how to levy them correctly under Davis-Stirling, and how to communicate with homeowners.
Get a Custom Proposal for Your Ventura County Community
Every quote is built specifically for your community — type, size, area of the county, and what you need. We respond within 48 hours.