Overview Selective enforcement occurs when an HOA board applies rules inconsistently, penalizing some homeowners while ignoring identical violations by others. This practice isn’t just unfair. It’s illegal under the Davis-Stirling Act (Civil Code 4350). When...
Overview Every HOA in California must prepare a reserve study every three years and disclose a written summary of reserve funding every year. These requirements exist to ensure long-term maintenance and repairs of the HOA’s major components are planned and funded, and...
Overview In California, homeowners have the legal right to recall their HOA board of directors. The recall process is designed to give members a practical way to hold boards accountable, but strict rules apply. Success requires meeting signature thresholds, following...
Overview California homeowners are entering 2026 facing overlapping crises: AB 130 fine enforcement, rising insurance costs, mounting special assessments, disputes over ADUs, and recall elections. Each of these issues has the potential to spark conflict, lawsuits, and...
Overview California law generally protects volunteer HOA board members from being sued individually. But those protections are not absolute. When directors cross the line into gross negligence, fraud, abuse of authority, or intentional misconduct, they can lose their...
Overview California law protects homeowners not only from discrimination by their HOA, but also from retaliation when they assert their rights. Retaliation occurs when an HOA board takes adverse actions against a homeowner because that homeowner filed a complaint,...