HOA Dispute

Upload your HOA notice.
Get your dispute packet.

Your HOA wrote the rules. They still have to follow them. HOA Dispute reads your notice, checks your homeowner rights under your state's law, finds the weak points, and generates a dispute letter and hearing request — before you pay or ignore anything.

Violation fineRule violation notice Architectural denialHearing notice Warning letterCollections referral
1
Upload
2
Your situation
3
Dispute packet
Upload your HOA notice

Take a photo, upload a file, or paste the text. Works on your phone the moment you open the envelope.

■ Attorney referral required — Lien and foreclosure notices require immediate professional legal attention. HOA foreclosure can proceed quickly in some states. Please contact a licensed real estate attorney immediately. Find one at avvo.com or your state bar association.
notice.pdf
🏠
Drop your HOA notice here
Photo, PDF, screenshot, or mailed notice
— or paste the notice text —
Your notice is analyzed and not stored. Documents are deleted after processing. HOA Dispute provides homeowner rights education and document templates — not legal advice. For lien notices, foreclosure threats, or amounts over $5,000, consult a licensed real estate attorney immediately.
Analyzing your HOA notice...
Reading notice fields...
Identifying procedural weak points...
Applying state HOA law...
Building dispute packet and letters...
Tell us your situation

Your answers determine which state law applies and which arguments are strongest.

1. What state is your property in?
2. Are you the owner or a renter?
3. Did the violation actually occur?
4. Did you receive proper written notice before this fine?
5. Have you been offered a hearing?
6. What outcome do you want?
7. Additional context (optional)
Your dispute packet

Based on your notice and situation.

You've used your free analysis.

Unlock the full packet and unlimited analyses going forward.

One time
$24.99
One notice. Full packet. PDF delivered.
Get this analysis
ReadTheClause is not a law firm. For lien notices, foreclosure threats, or disputes over $5,000, consult a licensed real estate attorney.