โ ๏ธ HOA Approval โ County Permit
Your HOA approval and your county building permit are separate requirements. You typically need both. Get HOA approval first โ in writing โ then apply for the county permit. HOA approval does not satisfy a permit requirement, and a county permit does not satisfy your HOA's requirements.
The Core Rule: HOA Authority Comes From Your CC&Rs
HOAs can only regulate what their recorded Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) allow. State law then sets limits on how HOAs can exercise that authority. The critical distinction: if a fence restriction isn't in your recorded CC&Rs, the HOA generally cannot enforce it.
What HOAs Can Typically Control
- Height limits (if specified in CC&Rs)
- Approved materials (if specific materials are listed in CC&Rs)
- Color and finish requirements
- Requiring pre-approval from the Architectural Control Committee
- Setback from the property line (stricter than county rules)
- Prohibition on chain-link in street-facing areas
What HOAs Cannot Do
- Apply rules inconsistently (approve one neighbor's wood fence, reject yours with no distinction)
- Deny applications arbitrarily with no written reason
- Enforce rules not written into the CC&Rs
- Take enforcement action without following their own procedures
- Discriminate against homeowners based on protected characteristics
State-by-State HOA Fence Guides
Texas HOA Fence Rules
TX Property Code ยง202, wood vs. metal disputes, and ACC appeal procedures.
Texas guide โFlorida HOA Fence Rules
FL Statute ยง720.3035, HOA denial rights, and the Division of Condominiums process.
Florida guide โCalifornia HOA Fence Rules
Davis-Stirling Act provisions governing HOA fence authority in California.
California guide โHow to Appeal an HOA Denial
Step-by-step process for challenging an arbitrary or inconsistent HOA fence denial.
Appeal guide โThe HOA Pre-Approval Process
- Read your CC&Rs and Architectural Guidelines โ Find the fence section. Note approved materials, height limits, and setback requirements specific to your HOA.
- Prepare your application โ Most HOAs require a site plan, fence specifications (height, material, color), and sometimes a photo mock-up or material sample.
- Submit in writing โ Always submit your ACC application in writing. Never rely on verbal approval. Keep copies of everything.
- Track the review deadline โ Most CC&Rs specify a review period (commonly 30 days). If no response by the deadline, check whether your CC&Rs include a "deemed approved" provision.
- Get approval in writing โ Don't start construction without written approval. A verbal "looks good" from a board member is not formal ACC approval.
- Apply for county permit โ After HOA approval, apply for any required county building permit.
Free: Fence Permit Application Checklist
Includes a complete HOA pre-approval checklist section.
โฌ Download Free PDF