Virginia
HOA Laws
Virginia has comprehensive legislation with separate statutes for property owners' associations and condominiums. The state has an active Office of the Common Interest Community Ombudsman that provides oversight and education.
Tracking aid, not legal advice.
SpotHOA monitors Virginia 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.
Governing statutes
Key provisions
- Associations must register annually with the Common Interest Community Board
- Board meetings must be open to owners with advance notice
- Annual budgets, financial statements, and reserve studies are mandatory
- Detailed resale disclosure requirements when selling a home in an HOA
- Owners have broad rights to inspect and copy association records
Regulatory body
Registers associations, handles complaints, provides education, and facilitates dispute resolution for common interest communities.
Notable features
Active Ombudsman office with registration and complaint handling. One of the most detailed resale disclosure requirements in the nation. Strong governance and financial reporting standards.
Tracking aid, not legal advice.
SpotHOA monitors Virginia 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.