Tea & Receipts

HOA nightmare in DFW: When your homeowners association goes too far and what you can do

DFW HOAs are notorious. Some are well-run community organizations. Others are petty fiefdoms. Here's your legal toolkit.

Common HOA overreach in DFW:

  • Fining for trash cans visible from the street (even on trash day)
  • Banning Ring doorbells or security cameras (likely unenforceable — see below)
  • Selective enforcement (fining some homeowners but not others for the same violation)
  • Towing vehicles without proper notice

Your rights under Texas law:

  1. Texas Property Code 202.023: HOA cannot prohibit a homeowner from displaying a security camera or video recording device. Your Ring doorbell is protected.

  2. Texas Property Code 202.007: HOA cannot enforce a restriction that violates a Texas or federal statute.

  3. Texas Property Code 209.006: HOA must provide written notice before any fine and give you the opportunity to cure the violation.

  4. Texas Property Code 209.0051: You have the right to an internal hearing before any fine over $200.

  5. Selective enforcement defense: If the HOA enforces a rule against you but not your neighbor for the same violation, you have a legal defense. Document the selective enforcement with dated photos.

How to fight back:

  1. Request copies of all CC&Rs, bylaws, and meeting minutes (they must provide them under TX Property Code 209.005)
  2. Attend board meetings (you have a right to under TX Property Code 209.0051)
  3. Document selective enforcement
  4. File a complaint with Texas AG (HOA enforcement falls under their jurisdiction)
  5. Small claims court for improper fines ($20K limit)

RECEIPTS REQUIRED: If posting about HOA overreach, include the specific rule cited, the notice you received, photos of the alleged violation, and evidence of selective enforcement.

Sources:

  • Texas Property Code Chapter 202 (general HOA restrictions)
  • Texas Property Code Chapter 209 (property owners' associations)
  • Texas AG — HOA complaint filing

You own the house. The HOA doesn't. Know the actual rules.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 3, 2026, 10:11 AM

4 Comments

u/budget_dfw·

Our HOA in Allen tried to pass a special assessment of $2,000/home without proper notice. Three homeowners filed with the Texas AG. Assessment was rescinded.

My HOA in Frisco tried to fine me $150 for having a Ring doorbell. I cited Property Code 202.023 in my appeal letter. Fine dropped within 48 hours.

Selective enforcement is rampant. My neighbor has a boat in the driveway for 3 years — no fine. I park a truck for 2 days — $50 fine. Documented both with dated photos and the appeal was upheld.

Attend the board meetings. Most problems happen because 5 people on the board make decisions for 500 homeowners and nobody shows up to challenge them.