100 HOA Decision-Makers
in Your County. $99.

Skip the cold calls to gatekeepers. Get the exact property managers and board presidents who approve vendor contracts at 100 HOA communities — with phone numbers, emails, and budget data.

One-time purchase. No subscription. Instant CSV download.

Are you a board member? Your association uses this platform free

Win HOA Contracts in Metro Atlanta

One landscaping contract with an HOA is worth $18,000–$36,000 per year. One roofing job for a 300-unit community runs $80,000–$200,000. Your cost to find them: $99.

9,400+

HOA communities in our Georgia database

49

Counties available — you pick yours

181x

ROI on one closed contract at $18K

What's in the List

Community name and address

Know exactly which HOA you're calling and where they are.

Property management company

The PM handles day-to-day vendor decisions. We give you their name, phone, and email.

Board president name and phone

Direct phone numbers where publicly available — skip the gatekeeper entirely.

Unit count and monthly HOA fee

Bigger community = bigger contract. Know the size before you call.

Annual budget estimate

See how much money is in play. A 200-unit HOA at $300/mo = $720K annual budget.

Sorted by contact data richness

The 100 communities with the most actionable contact info are delivered first.

Two Options. Both One-Time.

HOA Prospect List

$99 one-time

  • ✓ 100 HOA communities in your county
  • ✓ PM contact info + board member names
  • ✓ Unit count, HOA fee, annual budget
  • ✓ CSV download + in-app searchable table
Most Popular

First-Mover Access

$200 one-time

  • ✓ Everything in the $99 list
  • ✓ 12 months of RFP alerts as associations join the platform
  • ✓ First to know when a community in your county posts a bid
  • ✓ First contractor in the meeting wins 60%+ of the time

The Window Is Open

We're building this county by county. Contractors who move first get first-mover advantage on every RFP in their territory. Once your competitors subscribe, the advantage shrinks. Right now, most counties have zero subscribers.