Texas community association law
Texas community-association law lives in the Texas Property Code: Chapter 209 (the Residential Property Owners Protection Act) for HOAs, and Chapter 82 (the Uniform Condominium Act) for condominiums. Section pages link to verbatim statute text with plain-English orientation.
Statute text reproduced from the Texas Property Code; editorial summaries by the Common Elements editorial team. Not legal advice; not a substitute for Texas counsel.
No state CAM license: Texas does not license community association managers. Managers operate under general business statutes and, where applicable, real-estate licensing rules. CAI offers voluntary credentials (CMCA, AMS, PCAM), but the state does not require them.
Two Property Code chapters govern the two main association types. Select the chapter that applies to your community.
The Texas POA Act governs HOAs in residential subdivisions statewide. It is owner-protective by design: broad records-access rights, certified-mail notice and a cure period before enforcement, a court-order requirement before foreclosure, and a bar on foreclosing for fines-only debt.
TUCA governs condominiums created in Texas on or after January 1, 1994. Based on the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act, it covers association powers, insurance, assessments, the assessment lien and foreclosure, the management certificate, and the resale certificate. Older condominiums may fall under Chapter 81.
Texas Chapter 209 requires a court order before an HOA forecloses its assessment lien (§ 209.0092) and bars foreclosure for fines-only debt (§ 209.009). Records access under § 209.005 is broad and runs on a 10-business-day clock with a justice-court remedy. Texas has no SIRS or milestone-inspection regime for condominiums and no state CAM license. The result is an HOA framework that emphasizes procedural compliance and court supervision rather than a central regulatory agency.
Florida is the deepest reference. More states follow as the multi-state expansion continues.
Search Texas community-association statutes on Common Elements - plain-English summaries, keyword search, and (where available) the same deep section library as Florida. Free account for bookmarks, uploads, and side-by-side compare.
This is not legal advice. Consult Texas community-association counsel for your specific situation.