When buyers look at a home, they almost always ask:
"What are the HOA dues?"
And that's a fair question.
But it's not the complete one.
Because the monthly HOA fee is just the most visible part of the cost—and often not the one that catches people off guard.
Across the Mount Pleasant communities you've been reviewing, there's a consistent pattern:
The HOA fee is only one piece.
What sits behind it is where the differences show up.
In communities like I'On, Park West, and Dunes West, there's a clear structure behind how money flows through the HOA.
In these types of communities, nothing is random.
But that also means:
? You're more likely to see upfront or structured costs tied to ownership
Communities like Snee Farm Lakes and Heritage Village don't always present costs in the same structured way—but they show up differently.
In Snee Farm Lakes, for example:
In Heritage Village:
? These aren't "hidden" in the documents
But they're often unexpected in real life
In communities like Cooper Estates or some older sections of Mount Pleasant:
? Which can feel easier in the moment
But also means:
? Future costs may be handled differently (or less predictably)
Not because anything was hidden—but because it wasn't translated.
Here's where I see it most often:
These don't happen everywhere—but they're important to understand.
They typically occur when:
More structured communities often plan ahead to reduce these.
Less structured communities may deal with them when they arise.
Neither approach is wrong—but they feel different as an owner.
Instead of asking:
"What are the dues?"
A better question is:
"How is this community funded over time?"
Because what you're really choosing is:
Every HOA collects money.
The difference is:
Some communities feel more expensive on paper—but are predictable.
Others feel lighter upfront—but may carry unknowns later.
This isn't about avoiding HOA costs.
It's about understanding them clearly enough that nothing feels like a surprise.
Because when you understand how a community operates financially,
you're not just buying a home…
You're stepping into a system—and it should make sense to you before you get there.
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Before you focus only on costs, it helps to understand how HOA's work overall in Mount Pleasant. I have a break that down here: https://www.bonniewicks.com/coastal-living/2026/05/19/mount-pleasant-hoa-guide-what-buyers-need-to-know-before-buying?lang=eng
Bonnie Wicks, licensed as Bonnie Jean Wicks Bertalot, is an Associate Broker with Carolina One Real Estate serving Mount Pleasant, Charleston, and surrounding Lowcountry communities.
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