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Your HOA Rights as a Homeowner in North Carolina

Based on N.C.G.S. § 47F-3-102 · Last reviewed 2025

Quick reference

Max fine per violation

$100/violation

$100 per day per violation, maximum $1,500 aggregate per violation unless the declaration authorizes higher fines

Notice before fine

5 days

At least 5 days written notice before a fine is imposed; notice must state right to hearing

Hearing rights

Yes — required

Homeowner has right to a hearing before the board before the fine is imposed; request must be made within 5 days of notice

Reserve fund required

Not required

CC&Rs may still require reserves

What your HOA can fine you for

In North Carolina, your HOA's authority to fine homeowners comes from its governing documents — your CC&Rs, bylaws, and any board-adopted rules and regulations. State law sets the outer boundaries (including a $100 per-violation cap), but the specific violations that can be fined, and the fine amounts, are defined in your community's own documents.

Common categories include: landscaping and property appearance, parking, noise, pet rules, short-term rentals, architectural modifications, and common area use. If a violation isn't defined in your governing documents, your HOA generally cannot fine you for it.

Your rights before a fine is imposed in North Carolina

  • Written notice: North Carolina law requires your HOA to give you at least 5 days written notice before a fine takes effect. At least 5 days written notice before a fine is imposed; notice must state right to hearing
  • Hearing rights: North Carolina law requires your HOA to give you an opportunity to appear before the board before imposing a fine. Homeowner has right to a hearing before the board before the fine is imposed; request must be made within 5 days of notice
  • Fine schedule: Most states require the board to adopt and distribute a fine schedule. Your HOA generally cannot fine you for an amount not listed in the adopted schedule.
  • Daily accrual: In North Carolina, continuing violations may accrue $100/day after the initial fine. Address violations promptly to prevent fines from compounding.

What to do if you think a fine is wrong

  1. 1

    Request a hearing

    North Carolina state law entitles you to appear before the board. Submit a written request to the board as soon as you receive the fine notice.

  2. 2

    Review your CC&Rs

    Locate the specific rule your HOA claims you violated. If the violation isn't defined in your governing documents, or the fine exceeds what the schedule allows, you have grounds to dispute it.

  3. 3

    Dispute in writing

    Send a written letter to the board explaining why you believe the fine was issued in error. Reference the specific CC&R section. Keep a copy of everything.

  4. 4

    Request mediation

    Many states, including North Carolina, offer or require alternative dispute resolution before escalating to litigation. Check your CC&Rs for any mediation clauses.

  5. 5

    Consult an HOA attorney

    If the fine is significant or the board is unresponsive, an HOA attorney can review your situation and advise on your options under state law.

Useful tools for homeowners

CC&R Plain-English ExplainerPaste any clause and get a plain-English explanation of what it means and what it allows.Free — no account needed
Fine CheckerCheck whether a fine your HOA issued is within legal limits for your state.Coming soon
Dispute Letter GeneratorGenerate a professional dispute letter to send to your HOA board when challenging a fine.Coming soon
Official North Carolina HOA Statute

N.C.G.S. § 47F-3-102

Read the full law

Are you on the board managing violations in North Carolina?

LotWize enforces North Carolina's notice requirements automatically — sending compliant violation notices with the correct cure period and hearing options built into the workflow.

Start 14-Day Free Trial

Are you a board member? See the North Carolina HOA board compliance guide.

North Carolina board guide

This page provides general information about North Carolina HOA law from a homeowner perspective — not legal advice. Laws change frequently and may vary by community type, HOA structure, and governing documents. Consult an HOA attorney for advice specific to your situation.