HOAIssueFix / Why Us
Why Choose HOAIssueFix

Why Thousands of Homeowners Choose HOAIssueFix to Fight Their HOA Fines

73% win rate All 50 states No attorney fees 3 free analyses

Why Us
When you get a fine, you have four options. Three of them are traps.

Option 1 — Most Common Mistake

Ignore it.

Fines compound with late fees ($10–25/month). After a few months the HOA can file a lien on your home — even for a $150 landscaping fine. It never just "goes away."

Never do this
Option 2 — The Easy Trap

Just pay it.

Goes on your HOA record. Future violations get treated as "repeat offenses" — faster escalation, higher fines. You're also validating a fine that may be wrong or illegal.

Usually a bad move
Option 3 — Expensive & Slow

Hire an HOA attorney.

HOA attorneys charge $300–500/hour. A consultation plus a review letter: easily $500–800. For fines under $500, you'd spend more on the lawyer than the fine.

Overkill for most fines
Option 4 — The Smart Move

HOAIssueFix.

Know your rights, draft a professional defense, and send a letter boards take seriously — in minutes. Free to start. Most Pro users save 10–30× the $9/month cost on their first successful appeal.

The smart move

Side by side.

An honest comparison of your options.

What you needIgnore / PayHire LawyerHOAIssueFix.com
CostFine amount$300–800+$0 free · from $9.99/mo
Time to respond3–7 daysUnder 10 minutes
Know your legal rights✓ (at $300/hr)✓ Free
Professional appeal letter✓ (at $300/hr)✓ Instant
All 50 state laws✓ (their job)✓ Included
Available right nowNeeds scheduling✓ Instant
What we can't do — and we're honest about it

HOAIssueFix provides informational guidance and document templates — not legal advice. For fines over $2,000, foreclosure threats, or complex HOA lawsuits, consult a licensed real estate attorney.

No lawyer required

How to fight an HOA fine without a lawyer — and win

You don't need a $400-an-hour attorney to fight an HOA fine without a lawyer. Most fines fall apart on procedure, not on argument. HOAIssueFix gives you the same statute-based defenses an HOA attorney would use — drafted in minutes, for a fraction of the cost. Across our members, 73% of disputes end in a dismissed or reduced fine, with an average of $284 saved and an 11-day average resolution.

The defenses that actually move boards

Three procedural failures resolve the majority of disputes, and none of them require a courtroom:

  • Improper notice & denied due process. If the board skipped the written notice or hearing your statute requires — like Civil Code §5855 under California's Davis-Stirling Act — the fine is procedurally defective.
  • Selective enforcement. If neighbors with the same condition were never cited, the HOA cannot enforce the rule against you alone.
  • Expired cure period & fine caps. Many statutes mandate a cure window and cap fines — Florida's Chapter 720 and Colorado's CCIOA among them — and boards routinely ignore both.

HOAIssueFix vs. an HOA attorney

An attorney is the right call for foreclosure, an active lien, or a fine over $2,000. For a routine landscaping, parking, or paint-color fine, you're paying $500–$800 to send a letter that cites the same statute we identify automatically.

HOA attorney letter$500–$800
HOAIssueFixFree to start · from $9.99/mo

See exactly what each tier includes on our pricing page.

Coast to coast

How we cover HOA law in all 50 states

Community-association law is set state by state, so a generic appeal letter rarely works. HOAIssueFix maps your violation to the statute that governs where you live, then builds your dispute around the specific notice, hearing, or cure right your board most likely overlooked.

California — Davis-Stirling Act

Written notice and a hearing required before discipline, plus internal dispute resolution (IDR) rights.

Florida — Chapter 720

14-day notice, a hearing before an independent fining committee, and statutory limits on continuing fines.

Texas — PACT Act (Ch. 209)

Notice and a cure right for many violations, plus the right to request a hearing before the board fines you.

Arizona — ARS Title 33

Notice and hearing rights for planned communities; solar devices are protected from outright bans.

Colorado — CCIOA

Generally a 30-day cure period before fines, fair-and-uniform enforcement rules, and solar protections.

Nevada — NRS 116

Notice and hearing requirements, plus access to the state Ombudsman for Common-Interest Communities.

These six statutes are the most-cited examples — coverage extends to the community-association laws of every state. Look up your own rights in our state-by-state HOA guides, browse the HOA dispute FAQ, or run a free analysis to see which defense fits your notice.

Ready to fight your HOA fine?

Free to start. 3 analyses included. No credit card required.

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