Texas
HOA Laws
Texas has comprehensive HOA legislation that has been significantly expanded over the past two decades. The state has one of the largest HOA populations in the nation, and the Property Code provides detailed requirements for governance, assessment collection, and owner rights.
Tracking aid, not legal advice.
SpotHOA monitors Texas HOA-related statutes weekly. We surface drafts of detected changes here after review. Always confirm with your attorney before relying on any of this for board action. State law changes; this page may lag the actual statute by days.
Last updated June 1, 2026
Governing statutes
Key provisions
- Associations must hold open board meetings with notice to owners
- Detailed assessment lien and foreclosure procedures with strong consumer protections
- Owners have the right to display certain flags, signs, and religious items
- Annual budgets and financial disclosures are mandatory
- Restrictive covenant enforcement must follow specific procedures
- Owners can request and receive copies of association records within 10 business days
Notable features
One of the largest HOA populations in the U.S. with over 70,000 associations. Strong homeowner protections around flag displays, solar panels, and religious expression. Assessment foreclosure requires judicial process with specific safeguards.
Tracking aid, not legal advice.
SpotHOA monitors Texas HOA-related statutes weekly. We surface drafts of detected changes here after review. Always confirm with your attorney before relying on any of this for board action. State law changes; this page may lag the actual statute by days.
Last updated June 1, 2026