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How to Dispute Unfair HOA Fees, Fines, and Special Assessments

Challenge unreasonable HOA charges, fines, and special assessments. Know your rights under state law and your CC&Rs with step-by-step dispute process.

Last edited on May 17, 2026
5 min read

How to Dispute Unfair HOA Fees, Fines, and Special Assessments

Homeowners associations collect over $100 billion annually in fees and assessments — and disputes over unfair charges, selective enforcement, and improperly levied special assessments are among the most common homeowner complaints in America.

Whether you've been fined for a minor violation, hit with a surprise special assessment, or believe your HOA is mismanaging funds, you have specific legal rights to challenge these charges. This guide covers how to fight back effectively.

Types of HOA Charges You Can Dispute

Regular Assessments (Monthly/Annual Dues)

  • Can be disputed if the increase exceeds CC&R limits without a proper vote
  • Budget must be transparent and available for review
  • Increases beyond a certain percentage may require homeowner approval

Fines and Violation Fees

  • Must be based on actual CC&R violations
  • Due process is required (notice, opportunity to be heard)
  • Cannot be selectively enforced (only against certain homeowners)
  • Must be proportional and within published fine schedules

Special Assessments

  • Typically require homeowner vote (often 2/3 majority)
  • Must be for a specific, documented purpose
  • Proper notice and meeting procedures must be followed
  • Cannot exceed CC&R spending authority without a vote

Grounds for Disputing HOA Charges

Procedural Violations

  • Fine issued without proper written notice
  • No opportunity for a hearing before the fine was assessed
  • Special assessment voted on without proper quorum
  • Meeting notice not provided with required advance time
  • Board acting outside its authority under the CC&Rs

Selective Enforcement

  • You're fined for something neighbors do without consequence
  • Rules are enforced against specific homeowners but not others
  • Board members' properties violate the same rules without fines

Unreasonable or Improper Charges

  • Fine exceeds the published schedule
  • No rule actually prohibits what you were fined for
  • Special assessment benefits only certain units unfairly
  • Fees collected for unstated or unauthorized purposes

Step-by-Step: How to Dispute

Step 1: Request Documentation

Write to the HOA board requesting:

  • The specific CC&R provision you allegedly violated
  • The date of the violation
  • Evidence the HOA has of the violation (photos, complaints)
  • The fine schedule showing the charge amount
  • Meeting minutes where the fine/assessment was discussed
  • Financial records showing how assessments are being used

Most states require HOAs to provide records within 10-30 days.

Step 2: Request a Hearing

Most CC&Rs and state laws require the HOA to provide a hearing before or after a fine:

  • Submit a written request for a hearing within the specified timeframe
  • Prepare your defense (photos, evidence of compliance, evidence of selective enforcement)
  • Bring witnesses if applicable
  • Record the hearing if allowed in your state

Step 3: Write a Formal Dispute Letter

Dear HOA Board of Directors,

I am formally disputing [fine/assessment] dated [date] for [description]. This charge is improper because:

  1. [Specific reason — e.g., "No CC&R provision prohibits the cited activity"]
  2. [Procedural issue — e.g., "I was not provided proper notice as required by Section X of our CC&Rs"]
  3. [Selective enforcement — e.g., "Properties at [addresses] have the same condition without fines"]

I request this charge be rescinded within 30 days. If not resolved, I will file complaints with [state HOA regulatory agency] and pursue all available legal remedies.

Step 4: Organize With Neighbors

For special assessments or fee increases:

  • Attend board meetings (your right under most state laws)
  • Petition for a special homeowner meeting
  • Many states allow homeowners to call special meetings with 10-25% of owner signatures
  • Vote to recall board members if they're acting improperly

Step 5: Escalate

  • State HOA regulatory agency (varies by state — often under the attorney general or real estate commission)
  • State attorney general: Consumer protection division
  • Small claims court: For fines/assessments under the limit
  • Mediation/arbitration: Many CC&Rs require ADR before litigation
  • HOA ombudsman (available in some states like Nevada, Florida, Virginia)

State-Specific HOA Protections

State Key Protection
California (Davis-Stirling Act) Right to review records, limits on fine amounts, ADR required
Florida (Ch. 720) HOA ombudsman, right to attend meetings, election requirements
Texas (Prop Code Ch. 209) Cannot foreclose for fines alone, priority lien limits
Colorado (CCIOA) Right to records within 10 days, hearing before fines
Nevada Ombudsman, limits on foreclosure, required mediation

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Reviewed CC&Rs for the specific rule allegedly violated
  • [ ] Checked if proper procedures were followed (notice, hearing)
  • [ ] Documented evidence of selective enforcement (if applicable)
  • [ ] Requested a hearing in writing
  • [ ] Submitted formal dispute letter to the board
  • [ ] Requested relevant financial documents and meeting minutes
  • [ ] Filed with state HOA regulatory agency if unresolved
  • [ ] Organized with neighbors for collective action if needed

Bottom Line

HOAs have significant power, but that power has limits — defined by your CC&Rs, state law, and basic due process requirements. Most unfair HOA charges can be challenged through a formal written dispute, documented evidence of procedural violations or selective enforcement, and escalation to state regulators. The key is acting quickly, putting everything in writing, and knowing the specific CC&R provisions that apply to your situation.

Sources

  • Community Associations Institute: https://www.caionline.org/
  • State HOA Laws Directory: https://www.hopb.co/hoa-laws-by-state

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