
State hub
Texas 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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Texas HOA law is split across multiple Property Code chapters. Most owners should start with Chapters 202 and 209, then review Chapter 207 for disclosure timelines and Chapter 82 when the community is a condominium. Board authority often turns on both the recorded declaration and these chapters together.
When disputes involve fines, architectural control, or records access, timing and procedure can matter as much as the underlying rule. Verify exact section text on the Texas Legislature site before relying on summaries.
Practical pattern. Many Texas disputes escalate around process: meeting notice, election handling, and hearing timing. A complete document trail usually improves outcomes.
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.
Texas Property Code Chapter 202 (restrictive covenants)
Covers recorded deed restrictions and covenant changes in subdivisions. Start here when the dispute is about CC&R language, amendments, or enforcement that runs through the declaration rather than POA board procedure.
Texas Property Code Chapter 207 (POA disclosures and resale certificate timing)
Sets resale certificate and disclosure deadlines for property owners associations. Buyers, sellers, and agents use this chapter to keep contract timelines from slipping.
Texas Property Code Chapter 209 (Texas Residential Property Owners Protection Act)
The main POA chapter for many single-family and townhome associations: meetings, elections, fines, records, and owner protections. Pair it with your declaration when you challenge board process.
Texas Property Code Chapter 82 (Uniform Condominium Act)
Governs condominium regimes in Texas. Use Chapter 82 instead of Chapter 209 when your community is a condo under the recorded declaration.
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.
Texas Property Code 209.006 and 209.0064
Open-meeting and meeting-notice rules for many residential POA boards.
Texas Property Code 209.007 and 209.0075
Election and candidacy standards, including ballot and recount mechanics.
Texas Property Code 209.0061
Notice and hearing process before many enforcement actions and fines.
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).
- If you are in a resale transaction, request Chapter 207 disclosures early to avoid contract timeline pressure.
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
- Election-procedure challenges and proxy or absentee voting disputes