In Lake Keowee’s club communities, the membership can rival the home as a financial commitment — and its terms change over time. Treating it as its own diligence item, not an afterthought to the real estate, is what separates happy members from surprised ones.
What to get in writing.
Confirm exactly what each tier (e.g., Sport, Golf, Founders) includes and excludes, and match it to your real usage. Cliffs membership questions →
Get current initiation, annual dues, and any capital-contribution schedule in writing for the specific community.
Initiation-deposit refundability terms vary and have changed; confirm the current structure rather than relying on the past.
How membership moves and travels.
Understand how membership is handled in your purchase — what conveys, what re-initiates, and any transfer fees. HOA/POA & membership →
For Cliffs communities, confirm the seven-club reciprocity and how it applies to your tier. Cliffs portfolio →
OER’s membership and golf program differ from the Cliffs model; diligence them on their own terms. OER questions →
Fitting membership into the whole.
Add membership to POA, dock, insurance, and the mortgage for the true cost of ownership. Long-term ownership →
Choose the tier on realistic usage, not aspiration — the most common membership regret is over-buying.
David helps you obtain the current schedules and terms before you commit. Due-diligence checklist →
The questions buyers and sellers ask David first.
Because it can rival the home as a financial commitment and its terms change over time. Treating it as its own diligence item avoids costly surprises.
Current tier inclusions, initiation, dues, capital-contribution schedules, refundability terms, transfer mechanics, and reciprocity scope for the specific community.
It’s handled per the community’s process — some conveys, some re-initiates, often with transfer fees. Confirm exactly what applies to your purchase.
Choose the tier on realistic usage rather than aspiration — over-buying a tier you won’t fully use is the most common regret.
A 30-minute conversation is the fastest way to get a confident next step.