
State hub
Arizona HOA laws and resources
Last reviewed 2026-05-14 · content version 1 · expanded hub
Expanded hubs add curated statute callouts and compare links for high-traffic states. Orientation hubs still link official portals plus practical checklists; confirm citations on the government site before relying on them.
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Why two chapters matter. Arizona splits most association law into the Planned Communities Act (roughly A.R.S. 33-1801 through 33-1818) and the Condominium Act (roughly A.R.S. 33-1201 through 33-1270). If you cite the wrong chapter, the board or an agency can dismiss your argument even when the underlying issue is real.
Step 1: confirm classification. Read the opening pages of your CC&Rs or declaration and the county recorder filing for your subdivision. Note whether the project is set up as a condominium regime or a planned community (the labels are in the recorded instruments, not in the management company name).
Step 2: pull numbered sections. Use the official Arizona Revised Statutes link on this page, stay in Title 33, and browse or search only inside the act that matches your community type. Search for your exact problem (for example meeting notice, fines, records, liens, voting, or dispute process). Write down subsection numbers and copy one short sentence from each section you plan to rely on.
Step 3: contact the board in writing. Open with the classification you found and the declaration article or instrument you used. List the A.R.S. subsection numbers and ask for a written response that cites the specific document section or statute the board says supports its decision. Keep a dated copy of what you sent and what you received.
If the answer feels vague. When a fine, suspension, or meeting outcome is challenged, a useful reply from you or the board should tie together three things: the recorded rule or covenant language, the meeting or notice steps actually followed, and the matching 33-12xx or 33-18xx subsection. If any one of those is missing, ask in writing for the missing piece before you treat the decision as final.
Key statutes to review
Each code names the chapter or section range to open on the official state site. The explanation describes what that chapter usually covers so you can tell whether it matches your community type (HOA, condominium, or deed-only covenants) before you cite it in writing.
Arizona Revised Statutes 33-1801 to 33-1818 (Planned Communities Act)
Governs planned communities (most single-family and townhome HOAs). Search Title 33 in this range when your declaration says planned community, not condominium.
Arizona Revised Statutes 33-1201 to 33-1270 (Condominium Act)
Condominium-specific rights, assessments, and governance. Citing 33-18xx for a condo labeled as a planned community (or the reverse) is a common owner mistake.
What owners usually need first
These are narrower section callouts for common disputes (meetings, fines, records). Pair them with the chapters above and your recorded declaration.
A.R.S. 33-1801 and related sections
Applicability and owner rights framework for planned communities.
A.R.S. 33-1803 and related board-governance sections
Meeting process and board operation requirements in many communities.
A.R.S. 33-1201 and related condo provisions
Condominium-specific rights, obligations, and governance mechanics.
Homeowner action checklist
- Pull your declaration (CC&Rs), bylaws, and current rules first. The statute fills gaps, but your recorded documents control many day-to-day details.
- Check notice and hearing requirements before paying a fine or missing a board deadline.
- Request key records in writing: budget, reserve study, violation history, and meeting minutes tied to your issue.
- Track response deadlines and keep a dated paper trail (portal messages, email, and certified-mail receipts when needed).
- Decide planned community vs condominium from the recorded declaration or county recorder index before you search statutes.
- On the official ARS site, search Title 33 only inside the matching act, then paste subsection numbers and short quotes into any written request to the board.
Frequent dispute categories
- Architectural-review denials and design-rule interpretation
- Fines, suspension of privileges, and hearing procedure disputes
- Assessment collection, late fees, and lien timelines
- Records-access requests and board transparency concerns
- Planned-community vs condominium classification disputes