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HOA Knowledge Base

HOA violation guides for US homeowners.

Plain-English guides on HOA dispute law, your legal rights, and how to protect yourself from unfair fines.

HOA appeal letter guide
Appeal Letters

How to Write an HOA Appeal Letter That Actually Works

Most HOA appeal letters fail because they're emotional instead of procedural. Certified mail, clear violation ID, legal basis, evidence, and a specific outcome request.

5 min read
HOA homeowner rights
Your Rights

Your Rights as an HOA Homeowner in 2026

HOAs have real power, but they're not unlimited. You have the right to inspect records, attend board meetings, appeal fines, and challenge rules that contradict state law.

8 min read
Common HOA violations
Common Violations

The 7 Most Common HOA Violations — And How to Beat Each One

Lawn, parking, noise, pets, modifications, trash, and fences account for 85%+ of all HOA fines — each with specific due process requirements HOAs violate.

10 min read
HOA lien escalation
Escalation

HOA Liens: What Happens If You Ignore a Fine

Yes, your HOA can lien your home in most states. Here's the exact timeline, what triggers it, and when to escalate to an attorney.

7 min read
HOA board hearing
Hearings

HOA Board Hearings: What to Expect and How to Win

A board hearing is your best chance to win. Come with facts, not feelings. This guide covers what to bring, what to say, and the questions that put boards on defense.

9 min read
HOA state law 2026
State Law

HOA Law Changes 2025–2026: What's New in Your State

Florida, Texas, Nevada, and Colorado all passed new HOA laws recently. Here's what changed and what it means for your rights right now.

6 min read

Quick tips that matter

1
Always respond in writing

Never call your HOA about a fine. Written certified responses create the legal paper trail that protects you.

2
Photograph everything immediately

Take time-stamped photos of your property the day you get the notice — even if you think you're in violation.

3
Check if neighbors are treated the same

If neighbors have the same "violation" and aren't being fined, that's selective enforcement — a strong legal defense.

4
Request the specific rule in writing

Ask the HOA to cite the exact CC&R section. Vague references to "community standards" are often not enforceable.

HOA glossary

CC&Rs

Covenants, Conditions & Restrictions. Legal rules recorded with the county that govern your community.

Due Process

Required procedure before fining you: written notice, opportunity to cure, then hearing rights. Skipping steps often invalidates the fine.

Estoppel

If the HOA previously approved something in writing, they can't later fine you for it. Get all approvals in writing.

Selective Enforcement

When HOA enforces rules against some homeowners but not others doing the same thing. Courts frequently side with homeowners.

Assessment Lien

A legal claim against your property for unpaid fines. In most states, this can lead to foreclosure if unpaid.

Get your state's full HOA law guide

Pro users get a complete, state-specific breakdown — homeowner rights, fine limits, due process requirements, and key statutes for all 50 states.

HOA fine rules by state

Plain-English summaries of how the major state statutes treat HOA fines, notice requirements, and homeowner protections. Use this to spot the procedural step your HOA may have skipped.

California — Davis-Stirling Act

  • Written notice and a hearing are required before the HOA imposes a fine or discipline (Civil Code §5855).
  • Owners can demand Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) — a free meet-and-confer process — before things escalate.
  • Fines must follow a schedule of penalties the HOA adopted and distributed to members in advance.
  • Solar installations are protected; HOAs cannot effectively prohibit them.

Florida — Chapter 720

  • At least 14 days' written notice and a hearing are required before a fine is levied.
  • The hearing must be before an independent fining committee — board members or their relatives cannot sit on it.
  • Single-violation fines are generally capped at $100 per day, with statutory limits on the total that can accrue.
  • A fine generally cannot become a lien below a statutory dollar threshold.

Texas — PACT Act (Property Code Ch. 209)

  • For many violations, the HOA must give written notice and a chance to cure (often 30 days) before fining.
  • Owners have the right to request a hearing before the board to contest the violation.
  • Religious displays on entry doors and certain flags and political signs receive statutory protection.
  • Strict notice rules apply before any assessment lien can be foreclosed.

Arizona — ARS Title 33

  • Planned communities must provide notice and an opportunity to be heard before imposing penalties.
  • Solar energy devices are protected — HOAs cannot prohibit their installation.
  • Owners have a right to display the U.S. flag and certain political signs.
  • Owners can request HOA records, which helps prove selective enforcement.

Colorado — CCIOA

  • Associations generally must give notice and a roughly 30-day cure period before fining for most violations.
  • Enforcement must be reasonable and applied uniformly — uneven enforcement is a defense.
  • Solar panels, xeriscaping, and certain drought-tolerant landscaping are protected.
  • Fine amounts must be reasonable and disclosed in the governing documents.

Nevada — NRS 116

  • Written notice and a hearing are required before a fine, and fines are subject to statutory limits.
  • Homeowners can file complaints with the state Ombudsman for Common-Interest Communities.
  • A continuing violation generally must be re-noticed before additional fines accrue.
  • Solar and certain energy-efficiency improvements are protected.

Georgia — POA Act

  • Fining authority must be expressly granted in the recorded covenants — no covenant, no fine.
  • Associations must follow the notice and procedure set out in their own governing documents.
  • The U.S. flag is protected from outright HOA bans.
  • Selective or inconsistent enforcement remains a strong defense.

North Carolina — Planned Community Act (Ch. 47F)

  • Before fining, the HOA must give notice and hold a hearing before an adjudicatory panel of members.
  • Fines are limited per violation and per day for continuing violations under the statute.
  • The homeowner must be told the specific charge and given a chance to respond.
  • Improper notice or a skipped hearing is grounds to challenge the fine.

This is general information, not legal advice. HOA rules vary by community and statutes change — confirm the current law for your state or consult a licensed attorney before acting.

Homeowner Rights Guide

HOA homeowner rights: the basics every owner should know

Most homeowner HOA disputes are won on procedure, not opinion. While HOA laws by state differ — California's Davis-Stirling Act, Florida's Chapter 720, Texas's Property Code, ARS Title 33 in Arizona, CCIOA in Colorado, and NRS 116 in Nevada — five homeowner rights show up almost everywhere. Knowing them is the foundation of any HOA violation defense.

1. Right to proper notice

Before an HOA can fine you, it generally must send written notice identifying the specific violation and the rule it relies on. A vague or undated notice is often the first procedural defect homeowners can challenge.

2. Right to a cure period

Many states and CC&Rs require the HOA to give you a reasonable chance to fix the issue before any fine is levied. If a fine arrives with no opportunity to cure, that timing can be disputed.

3. Right to a hearing

Due process usually entitles you to request a hearing before the board or a fining committee. Statutes like Davis-Stirling, Chapter 720, and the Carolinas' planned-community acts make this hearing right explicit.

4. Protection from selective enforcement

An HOA must apply its rules evenly. If neighbors commit the same violation without consequence, selective enforcement is one of the strongest grounds to have your fine waived.

5. Fine caps and reasonableness

Several states limit how much an HOA can charge per violation or per day, and fines must generally be reasonable and tied to a real rule. Fines beyond those limits can be reduced or struck.

Put your rights to work

HOAIssueFix has helped homeowners across all 50 states reach a 73% win rate and save $284 on average per case.

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Go deeper with our guides on how the process works, the most common HOA questions, or read verified homeowner reviews. Scroll up to find the specific HOA laws by state for your community.

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HOA Laws by State

Know your HOA rights in your state

HOA fine rules, notice requirements, fee caps, and foreclosure protections vary a lot by state. Start with your state’s guide — each one explains the exact statute and how to fight an unfair fine where you live:

California
Davis-Stirling Act · hearing rights, $1,800 foreclosure limit
Texas
Property Code Ch. 209 · cure period + 180-day redemption
Florida
Chapter 720 · $100/$1,000 fine caps + committee hearing
Arizona
A.R.S. Title 33 · hearing + low-cost state OAH appeal
Colorado
CCIOA + 2022 reforms · cure, payment plans, no fine foreclosure
Nevada
NRS 116 · hearing + state Ombudsman & mandatory ADR
North Carolina
Chapter 47F · hearing required, $100/day fine cap
Georgia
Property Owners’ Association Act · declaration-driven
Virginia
POA Act · low $50 / $10-per-day charge caps
Washington
WUCIOA / RCW 64.38 · notice, hearing & fee limits

More states added regularly. Don’t see yours? Our free analyzer automatically applies the correct state law to your notice — all 50 states.