HOA Clothesline Bans & Right-to-Dry Laws
It sounds trivial until you get the notice: many HOAs ban outdoor clotheslines on aesthetic grounds. But a number of states classify a clothesline as a solar-energy device and protect your right to use one.
States With Right-to-Dry Laws
A growing group of states protect outdoor drying through 'right to dry' or solar-access laws, treating a clothesline or drying rack as a solar-energy device that an HOA cannot prohibit. The reasoning: line-drying uses the sun instead of an electric dryer, advancing state energy-conservation policy.
The strength of the protection varies. Some states broadly void clothesline bans; others allow reasonable rules about location (such as backyard-only or screened placement) while still prohibiting an outright ban.
Reasonable Placement Rules
Even in right-to-dry states, an HOA can often require that the clothesline be in a backyard, not visible from the street, or removed when not in use — as long as the rule does not significantly raise cost or effectively prevent drying. The line between a 'reasonable restriction' and an unlawful ban is the heart of most disputes.
Responding to a Clothesline Notice
Look up whether your state has a right-to-dry or solar-access statute. If it does, respond in writing citing the law and stating that a clothesline qualifies as a protected solar-energy device. If the HOA only wants it screened or backyard-only and your state allows that, propose a compliant placement to resolve it quickly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an HOA ban a clothesline?
In states with right-to-dry or solar-access laws, generally no — a clothesline is treated as a protected solar-energy device. Other states allow HOAs to ban or heavily restrict them. Check whether your state has a right-to-dry statute.
What is a right-to-dry law?
It is a state law that protects outdoor drying by classifying a clothesline or drying rack as a solar-energy device, preventing HOAs from banning it because line-drying conserves energy.
Can my HOA require my clothesline be in the backyard?
Often yes, even in right-to-dry states. HOAs may impose reasonable placement rules (backyard-only, screened, or removed when unused) as long as they do not effectively prevent drying or significantly raise cost.
How do I respond to a clothesline violation?
Check for a state right-to-dry or solar-access law and, if one exists, respond in writing citing it. If the HOA only wants screened or backyard placement that your state allows, propose a compliant location.
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