HOA Glossary: Key Terms and Definitions for Homeowners and Boards
Homeowner association governance operates within a dense framework of legal and administrative terminology that shapes rights, obligations, and procedures for millions of property owners across the United States. Misreading a single term — "assessment" versus "special assessment," or "quorum" versus "majority" — can lead to flawed votes, missed deadlines, or invalid enforcement actions. This glossary defines the core vocabulary used in HOA governing documents, state statutes, and federal compliance contexts, providing precise definitions that boards and homeowners can apply to real governance situations.
Definition and scope
An HOA glossary is a structured reference catalogue of the standardized terms used in community association law, governing documents, and administrative practice. The terms span four primary domains: legal instruments (declarations, bylaws, CC&Rs), financial operations (assessments, reserves, liens), governance mechanics (quorum, proxies, board authority), and regulatory compliance (Fair Housing Act requirements, FHA loan certification, Americans with Disabilities Act obligations).
The scope of relevant terminology is defined largely by state statute. As documented by the Community Associations Institute (CAI), approximately 74 million Americans live in community associations governed by documents that deploy this vocabulary with binding legal effect. States including California (Civil Code §§ 4000–6150, the Davis-Stirling Act), Florida (Chapter 720, Florida Statutes), and Texas (Property Code Chapter 209) codify dozens of these terms with statutory definitions that supersede any conflicting language in a community's private documents.
For a broader orientation to the subject matter, see HOA Fundamentals, which frames the structural context in which these terms operate.
How it works
Glossary terms in the HOA context operate across three tiers of authority, each of which can define or modify a term's meaning:
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Federal law and regulation — Statutes such as the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3604) and the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. § 12101) impose definitions of "reasonable accommodation," "disability," and "protected class" that HOA boards must apply regardless of what a community's own documents say.
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State statute — Each state's community association act defines terms such as "common element," "unit," "declarant," and "turnover" within its own jurisdiction. These statutory definitions control when a community's documents are silent or ambiguous.
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Governing documents — The Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs), bylaws, and rules typically include their own defined terms section. Definitions here bind members contractually but cannot override federal or state law.
Understanding which tier's definition applies requires identifying the governing jurisdiction and the document hierarchy applicable to a specific dispute or question.
Common scenarios
The following 30 terms are among the most operationally significant in HOA governance, organized by functional category.
Legal instruments
- CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions): The foundational recorded document that encumbers individual parcels and establishes use restrictions, maintenance obligations, and assessment authority. Recorded with the county recorder and binding on all successive owners.
- Bylaws: The operational rules governing the association as a corporate entity — meeting procedures, board composition, officer duties, and election mechanics.
- Declaration: The master recorded instrument (sometimes synonymous with CC&Rs) that creates the association and defines the common interest community's structure.
- Articles of Incorporation: The document filed with the state that establishes the association as a legal nonprofit corporation.
- Rules and Regulations: Board-adopted operational standards (pool hours, parking procedures, pet weight limits) that do not require member vote to amend, distinguishing them from CC&Rs and bylaws. See HOA Community Rules Enforcement for enforcement mechanics.
Governance mechanics
- Quorum: The minimum number of members (or member votes) required for a meeting or ballot to be valid. Quorum thresholds are set by bylaws and, in states like California, by statute (Davis-Stirling Act § 4070).
- Proxy: Written authorization by a member for another person to cast a vote on their behalf at a meeting.
- Board of Directors: The elected governing body holding fiduciary responsibility for the association's operations. See HOA Board of Directors for role definitions.
- Declarant: The developer or original landowner who created the community. Declarant rights — the authority to appoint board members or modify documents during the development period — are a defined legal status under most state codes.
- Developer Transition: The formal transfer of association control from the declarant to the homeowner-elected board. Also called "turnover." Addressed in detail at HOA Developer Transition.
- Executive Session: A closed board meeting restricted to specified sensitive matters (personnel, legal advice, delinquency hearings). California Civil Code § 4935 and similar state statutes enumerate permissible executive session topics.
- Open Meeting: A board meeting at which homeowners have the right to attend and, typically, to speak during a designated homeowner forum period.
Financial operations
- Assessment (Regular/Annual): Mandatory periodic charges levied on each owner to fund operating expenses and reserve contributions. Authority to levy assessments derives from the CC&Rs and is regulated at the state level.
- Special Assessment: A non-periodic charge levied for a specific capital expenditure or revenue shortfall not covered by the operating budget. Distinguished from regular assessments by its purpose and, under most statutes, subject to higher member approval thresholds. See HOA Special Assessments.
- Reserve Fund: Funds accumulated for the repair or replacement of major common area components (roofs, paving, elevators). Reserve adequacy is evaluated through a reserve study. See HOA Reserve Funds.
- Reserve Study: An engineering and financial analysis projecting the remaining useful life and replacement cost of major components, used to calculate adequate monthly reserve contributions. Required by statute in California (Civil Code § 5550) and Colorado (C.R.S. § 38-33.3-209.5).
- Lien: A legal claim recorded against a property for unpaid assessments. HOA assessment liens are statutory in most states and can trigger foreclosure proceedings. See HOA Liens and Foreclosure.
- Delinquency: The status of an owner account with unpaid assessments past their due date. Collection procedures are governed by state statute and the association's collection policy.
- Operating Budget: The annual financial plan allocating projected expenses across line items (insurance, landscaping, utilities, management fees) and setting the regular assessment rate required to fund them. See HOA Budget and Financial Management.
- Fiscal Year: The 12-month accounting period used for budgeting and financial reporting. May or may not align with the calendar year.
Property and common areas
- Common Area (or Common Element): Property owned by the association (in a planned community) or by all members as tenants-in-common (in a condominium) and maintained collectively. Definitional boundaries differ between planned developments and condominium regimes. See HOA Common Areas.
- Limited Common Element: A portion of the common area assigned to the exclusive use of one or a subset of units — a balcony, assigned parking space, or patio. The distinction determines maintenance responsibility.
- Exclusive Use Common Area: California Davis-Stirling terminology for the equivalent of a limited common element.
- Architectural Control Committee (ACC): A board-appointed body responsible for reviewing and approving proposed modifications to exterior structures, landscaping, or structures within the community. See HOA Architectural Control.
Compliance and legal
- Fair Housing Act (FHA): Federal law (42 U.S.C. §§ 3601–3619) prohibiting discrimination in housing-related transactions based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability. HOAs are subject to FHA requirements for rule enforcement and accommodation requests.
- Reasonable Accommodation: A modification to an HOA rule or policy required to allow a person with a disability equal opportunity to use and enjoy their dwelling. Governed by HUD guidance under the Fair Housing Act.
- Business Judgment Rule: A legal doctrine protecting board decisions from liability when directors act in good faith, within their authority, and with reasonable inquiry. The rule is codified in nonprofit corporation statutes in most states.
- Fiduciary Duty: The legal obligation of board members to act in the best interest of the association, encompassing duties of care, loyalty, and obedience.
- Easement: A recorded right for one party to use another's property for a specified purpose — access, utilities, drainage. Easements affecting HOA-governed land are typically identified in the declaration.
- Encroachment: A structural intrusion by one property onto an adjacent property or common area, creating potential title and maintenance disputes.
- Resale Disclosure Package: Documents required by state law to be delivered to a prospective buyer before closing, including financial statements, governing documents, pending litigation disclosures, and violation notices. Requirements vary by state. See HOA Resale Disclosure Requirements.
Decision boundaries
The precise meaning of any HOA term depends on a three-part analysis:
- Jurisdictional statute: