Communities

Connecticut (CT) HOA guide

HOA management software for Connecticut.

Connecticut adopted a version of the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act covering condominiums, cooperatives, and planned communities formed after 1984. The statute governs board fiduciary duties, lien priority, resale certificates, and dispute resolution.

How HOA law works in Connecticut

Connecticut Common Interest Ownership Act

Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 47-200 et seq.

  • Connecticut Common Interest Ownership Act layers procedural and disclosure requirements on top of every HOA's recorded Declaration and Bylaws.

  • Most boards may levy fines, record liens for unpaid assessments, and adopt rules — but only within the powers actually granted by the governing documents and applicable state law.

  • Hearing rights, fine caps, and meeting-notice requirements vary by state and by HOA. Review your Declaration alongside the relevant statute before adopting amendments or enforcement policies.

This page is informational orientation, not legal advice.Connecticut HOAs vary in age, document quality, and statutory coverage. Review with counsel before adopting amendments or changing enforcement policy.

What real HOAs are asking — with citations

Every shared answer below comes from a real HOA's governing documents, with section + page citations. Browse the archive or run your own questions on the demo.

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