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Georgia HOA Special Assessment Rules (2026)

O.C.G.A. § 44-3-70 (Georgia Condominium Act) / § 44-3-221 (Property Owners' Assoc. Act) · Last reviewed 2026

A special assessment is a one-time charge levied by an HOA board to cover an unexpected or deferred expense not covered by the operating budget or reserve fund. Below are the key rules that govern how Georgia HOAs may levy special assessments and what rights homeowners have.

Key facts at a glance

Board Authority

Can levy without member vote

Board may levy special assessments as authorized by the declaration and bylaws; no statewide cap.

Member Vote

Not required by statute

Trigger: Only if required by the community's declaration or bylaws

Notice Required

10 days

Advance written notice to members before assessment levy

Emergency Exception

Available

Board may levy emergency assessments when necessary to address immediate threats to property or safety.

Key rules in Georgia
  • Board authority controlled by declaration and bylaws
  • No statewide cap on special assessment amounts
  • 10-day advance notice to members is standard practice
  • Emergency assessments may bypass standard notice
  • Disputes resolved per governing document procedures or through courts
Homeowner rights & dispute options

Homeowners may challenge special assessments at a board meeting or through the governing document dispute process. Georgia courts have jurisdiction for unresolved disputes.

Lender & financing impact

Pending special assessments should be disclosed in the resale package. Lenders review for large pending assessments during the underwriting process.

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This page provides general legal information only — not legal advice. HOA special assessment laws vary by community type (planned community, condominium, cooperative, etc.) and are subject to change. The information on this page is based on statutes in effect as of 2026 and may not reflect recent legislative changes. Always consult a licensed HOA attorney and review your governing documents before taking action.