Title and Escrow
Understanding HOA governing documents: what title teams must review before closing
Every property in a homeowners association is governed by a stack of legal documents that define what the owner can do, what the association can charge, and how disputes are resolved.
In this article
- What Are HOA Governing Documents
- Why Lenders and Title Insurers Require Them
- What to Look for During Review
- How Governing Documents Affect Marketability of Title
- Red Flags: Outdated Docs, Conflicts, and Unrecorded Amendments
- Recorded vs. Unrecorded Governing Documents
- Governing Document Types and Closing Impact
For title agents, escrow officers, and realtors, those documents are not just paperwork. They are the foundation of the association's legal authority, and any flaw in them can derail a closing or expose the buyer to obligations no one disclosed. Understanding what HOA governing documents are and how to review them efficiently is a core competency for any closing team that works in HOA communities. This article walks through each document type, explains why lenders and title insurers care, highlights the red flags that should trigger further investigation, and provides a practical framework for reviewing governing documents before the file reaches the closing table.
Governing documents are rarely simple. They span decades of amendments, restatements, board resolutions, and state law changes. A single property may be subject to a master association, a sub-association, and a recreational district, each with its own set of documents. The title team's job is not to memorize every provision, but to identify the documents that matter for closing, confirm they are current and properly recorded, and flag any condition that could impair marketability of title or violate lender guidelines. That process starts with knowing what constitutes the full set of governing documents and why each piece matters.
What Are HOA Governing Documents
HOA governing documents are the collection of legal instruments that create the association, empower it to act, and bind property owners to a shared set of obligations. The core documents almost always include the declaration of covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs), the bylaws, the articles of incorporation, and the rules and regulations. Some associations also maintain minutes, resolutions, and policies that carry enforceable weight even if they are not recorded.
The Declaration or CC&Rs
The declaration, often called the CC&Rs, is the primary document that creates the association and attaches covenants to the land. It defines the property boundaries, the common areas, the assessment structure, and the use restrictions that run with the property forever. Because the CC&Rs are recorded in the land records, they provide constructive notice to every subsequent purchaser. Title teams should verify that the recorded CC&Rs match the version referenced in the resale certificate and that all amendments have been properly filed.
The Bylaws
Bylaws govern the internal operation of the association. They define board structure, meeting procedures, voting rights, quorum requirements, and the process for electing directors. While bylaws do not typically create property restrictions, they determine how the association makes decisions, including decisions about assessments, special levies, and enforcement actions. Lenders sometimes review bylaws to confirm the association is functionally governed and that owner votes are required for major changes.
The Articles of Incorporation
Articles of incorporation establish the association as a legal entity with the state. They define the association's name, purpose, and powers, including the authority to levy assessments, file liens, and sue or be sued. Title insurers care deeply about the articles because they confirm the association has the legal capacity to encumber the property. If the articles were never filed or have lapsed, the association's enforcement authority may be challenged. Learn more in our detailed guide on how HOA articles of incorporation affect property transfers and title insurance.
Rules and Regulations
Rules and regulations are typically adopted by the board under authority granted in the CC&Rs or bylaws. They cover day-to-day issues like parking, pets, noise, and exterior modifications. Unlike CC&Rs, rules can often be changed by board vote without owner approval, which makes them more fluid and harder to track. Title teams should confirm whether the rules in effect at closing match the set provided in the resale package and whether any recent changes have been communicated to owners.
Minutes and Resolutions
Meeting minutes and board resolutions may contain decisions that affect the property, such as special assessments, covenant enforcement actions, or amendments pending owner vote. While minutes are not recorded documents, they can reveal material facts that belong in the resale certificate. Title teams should not ignore them, especially if the resale certificate references pending actions or recent votes.
Why Lenders and Title Insurers Require Them
Lenders and title insurers review governing documents because those documents control the financial and legal risks attached to the property. A lender making a thirty-year loan needs to know that the property value will not be undermined by unrestricted assessment increases, that the borrower will not be forced into a rental cap that violates the loan terms, and that the association cannot terminate the owner's rights without due process. Title insurers need to confirm that the covenants are properly recorded, that amendments followed the correct procedure, and that no unrecorded restriction will surface after closing to impair the insured title.
The governing documents also determine whether the property qualifies for certain loan programs. FHA, VA, and conventional loans each have guidelines about association financial health, insurance requirements, and owner-occupancy ratios. Those guidelines are enforced not by inspecting the property, but by reviewing the governing documents and the resale certificate. If the documents reveal a condition that violates program rules, the loan may be denied even if the borrower's credit and income are flawless. For a closer look at how lender requirements intersect with HOA documentation, see our article on the HOA document checklist for closing teams.
What to Look for During Review
A thorough review of HOA governing documents does not mean reading every page word for word. It means targeting the provisions that directly affect closing, title, and lender approval. Title teams should develop a checklist that covers the categories below and apply it consistently across every HOA file.
Restrictive Covenants
Look for use restrictions that could affect the buyer's intended use of the property. Rental restrictions, short-term rental bans, age restrictions, pet limits, and home business prohibitions are common examples. If the buyer plans to rent the property and the CC&Rs cap rentals at a percentage of units, verify whether the cap has been reached. If the buyer has three dogs and the rules limit owners to two, that is a deal-level issue that should surface before closing.
Amendment History
Verify that all amendments were passed according to the vote thresholds in the original documents, that they were recorded, and that they are included in the document set provided for review. Missing amendments create ambiguity about which provisions are currently in force. If the title commitment references the original CC&Rs but a later amendment changed the assessment structure, the commitment is incomplete and must be updated. For more on amendment risks, read our guide on recent HOA amendments and rule changes.
Voting Rights and Assessment Authority
Confirm that the association has the authority to levy regular and special assessments, that the assessment formula is defined, and that owner votes are required for assessment increases above a stated threshold. Lenders want to see that the association cannot unilaterally impose unlimited financial obligations on the borrower. Title insurers want to confirm that assessment liens are valid and enforceable.
Maintenance Obligations
Determine which maintenance responsibilities belong to the owner and which belong to the association. Ambiguity here can lead to post-closing disputes, especially in condo regimes where the boundary between unit and common element is not obvious. If the documents assign roof or exterior maintenance to the association, verify that the association maintains adequate reserves to fund that obligation.
How Governing Documents Affect Marketability of Title
Marketability of title means that a reasonable buyer, acting with full knowledge, would accept the title without objection. Governing documents affect marketability in two ways: by creating enforceable obligations that run with the land, and by revealing conditions that a buyer would consider material to the purchase decision. If the CC&Rs contain a provision that violates public policy or fair housing law, the title may be technically recordable but practically unsalable. If the documents reveal a pending special assessment that the seller has not disclosed, the buyer may refuse to close or demand a credit.
Title insurers address this risk by adding exceptions and requirements to the title commitment. A typical commitment will except from coverage any CC&R provisions that restrict use, and will require that the association's lien for unpaid assessments be paid or insured. If the governing documents are unclear, incomplete, or conflict with each other, the underwriter may add additional requirements that delay closing while the association clarifies the issue. For more on how financial conditions in governing documents create closing risk, see our article on HOA special assessments and closing risk.
Red Flags: Outdated Docs, Conflicts, and Unrecorded Amendments
Not every governing document set is clean. Title teams should train themselves to spot the following red flags and escalate them before the file is under deadline pressure.
- Outdated documents: The resale package contains the original CC&Rs from 1985 but no amendments. Either no amendments exist, which is rare for an association of any age, or the amendments are missing and the document set is incomplete.
- Conflicting provisions: The CC&Rs cap assessments at five hundred dollars annually, but a later amendment raises the cap to one thousand without a corresponding change in the assessment formula. Conflicts like this create uncertainty about enforceability.
- Unrecorded amendments: The association claims an amendment was passed by owner vote but it was never filed with the county. Unrecorded amendments may not provide constructive notice and may be unenforceable against a bona fide purchaser.
- Mismatched association names: The title commitment references one association name, the resale certificate references another, and the articles of incorporation reference a third. This usually signals a merger, name change, or split that has not been properly documented.
- Missing pages or signatures: The recorded documents are incomplete, missing signature pages, or lack notarization. Recorded documents with formal defects may be challenged in court.
Recorded vs. Unrecorded Governing Documents
Recorded documents are filed with the county recorder or clerk of court and are available for public inspection. They provide constructive notice, meaning that a purchaser is legally deemed to have knowledge of their contents regardless of whether they actually reviewed them. Unrecorded documents, such as internal board resolutions, unfiled amendments, or policy memoranda, do not provide constructive notice. A buyer who purchases without actual knowledge of an unrecorded restriction may be able to challenge its enforceability.
Title insurers generally insure against recorded risks, not unrecorded ones. If an association attempts to enforce an unrecorded amendment after closing, the title policy may not cover the loss. That is why title teams should verify not only what the documents say, but whether each document that affects title has been properly recorded. If the association has adopted a recent rule change that affects use or assessment but has not recorded it, the team should treat that as a disclosure issue and either require recording or note the risk for the buyer and lender.
Governing Document Types and Closing Impact
The table below maps each type of governing document to what it controls, why it matters for closing, and the specific risk it creates if it is missing, outdated, or unrecorded. Use this as a quick reference during intake or document review.
| Document Type | What It Controls | Closing Impact | Risk If Missing or Defective |
|---|---|---|---|
| CC&Rs / Declaration | Use restrictions, assessments, common areas, maintenance obligations | Determines property eligibility for financing and buyer expectations | Unenforceable restrictions; unknown assessment liability; title exceptions |
| Bylaws | Board structure, voting, meetings, elections, quorum | Confirms association is functional and decisions follow proper process | Invalid board actions; challenged special assessments; governance disputes |
| Articles of Incorporation | Legal existence, corporate powers, lien authority | Validates association's capacity to encumber property and sue | Unenforceable liens; invalid enforcement actions; title claims |
| Rules and Regulations | Parking, pets, rentals, noise, exterior modifications | Affects buyer lifestyle and lender review of use restrictions | Buyer surprises; rental cap violations; post-closing disputes |
| Amendments | Changes to CC&Rs, bylaws, or association powers | Determines which provisions are currently enforceable | Ambiguous enforceability; unrecorded amendment risk; title gaps |
| Minutes / Resolutions | Board decisions, pending actions, special assessments | Reveals material conditions not shown in recorded documents | Undisclosed assessments; enforcement actions; pending litigation |
Frequently Asked Questions
What are HOA governing documents?
HOA governing documents are the legal instruments that create, empower, and regulate a homeowners association. They typically include the declaration or CC&Rs, bylaws, articles of incorporation, rules and regulations, and meeting minutes. Together they define the association's authority, owner obligations, and restrictions that run with the land.
Why do lenders require HOA governing documents before closing?
Lenders require HOA governing documents because the documents contain restrictions, assessment powers, and lien authority that directly affect the property's value and the lender's collateral. Loan underwriters review these documents to confirm the property is eligible for financing and that no hidden obligations threaten the borrower's ability to repay.
What should title teams look for when reviewing HOA governing documents?
Title teams should review amendment history, restrictive covenants, assessment and lien authority, voting rights, maintenance obligations, and any provisions that could impair marketability of title. Red flags include outdated documents, conflicting provisions, unrecorded amendments, and restrictions that violate fair lending guidelines.
Can unrecorded HOA amendments affect a property transfer?
Unrecorded amendments create significant title risk because they may not provide constructive notice to purchasers or lenders. If an amendment imposes new assessments or restrictions but was never recorded, a court may not enforce it against a bona fide purchaser. Title insurers often except unrecorded amendments from coverage.
What is the difference between recorded and unrecorded governing documents?
Recorded governing documents are filed with the county recorder or land records office and provide constructive notice to all parties. Unrecorded documents, such as internal board resolutions or unfiled amendments, do not provide public notice and may not be enforceable against subsequent purchasers. Title teams should verify recording status for every document that affects title.
How do outdated HOA governing documents create closing risk?
Outdated governing documents may contain provisions that have been superseded by later amendments, creating confusion about which rules apply. They may also fail to reflect changes in state law, leaving the association without current authority to levy assessments or enforce covenants. Lenders and title insurers require the most current recorded version to minimize uncertainty.
Key Takeaways
Reviewing HOA governing documents is not a formality. It is a protective step that guards against title defects, lender objections, and buyer surprises. Here is what title, escrow, and realtor teams should remember:
- Know the full document set. CC&Rs, bylaws, articles, rules, and minutes each play a different role. Missing any one of them creates a gap in your understanding of the property's legal obligations.
- Verify recording status. Recorded documents provide constructive notice. Unrecorded documents create title risk. Confirm that every amendment and restriction that affects title has been properly filed.
- Target your review. Focus on restrictions, amendment history, assessment authority, and maintenance obligations. These are the areas most likely to generate lender questions or buyer objections.
- Flag red flags early. Outdated documents, conflicting provisions, unrecorded amendments, and mismatched association names should be escalated before the file is under deadline pressure.
- Use the document table as a checklist. Map each document type to its closing impact and verify that the resale package is complete and current before submitting to the lender or underwriter.
Teams that treat governing document review as a structured process rather than a passive receipt of paperwork close more files on time and face fewer post-closing claims. The investment of an extra thirty minutes during intake can save days of delay and thousands of dollars in unexpected liability.