HOA laws/New Hampshire
Manchester, New Hampshire downtown street at night

State hub

New Hampshire HOA laws and resources

Last reviewed 2026-05-14 · content version 1 · orientation 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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Legal snapshot

New Hampshire law is not one generic "HOA chapter." Most owner issues sit at the intersection of your recorded declaration and bylaws, the state chapter that matches your community type (condominium versus planned community versus deed-only covenants, depending on the state), and sometimes a nonprofit corporation title when the association is incorporated.

Three statutory threads to map before you argue about fines, meetings, or records:

  • New Hampshire condominium and horizontal property statutes (search New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated for "condominium" and "horizontal property").
  • New Hampshire nonprofit corporation act for incorporated associations.
  • Local zoning and wetland setbacks for exterior improvements.

Open the Primary sources links on this page, search inside the official code browser using the keywords from your declaration, and copy the current section number and a short quoted phrase before you rely on it in email, a portal message, or a hearing. Management branding ("HOA," "POA," "metro district") does not replace checking which chapter actually applies.

Educational overview only; not legal advice.

Practical pattern. In New Hampshire, owners often lose leverage when they cite the wrong chapter for their community type. Pull the first pages of your declaration and the county recorder filing, match the label the statute uses, then search the official code index with that label before you draft a demand.

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.

  • New Hampshire condominium and horizontal property statutes

    search New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated for "condominium" and "horizontal property"

  • New Hampshire nonprofit corporation act

    incorporated associations

  • Local zoning and wetland setbacks

    exterior improvements

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.

  • New Hampshire condominium and horizontal property statutes

    search New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated for "condominium" and "horizontal property"

  • New Hampshire nonprofit corporation act

    incorporated associations

  • Local zoning and wetland setbacks

    exterior improvements

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).

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
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Educational only. Not legal advice.