⚖️ TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

Can Your HOA Tow Your Car? Rules & Legal Limits

Published Mar 2, 2026 · Updated Mar 2, 2026 · 13 min read
MarkUpdated Mar 2, 2026

Published: 2026-03-02 · Updated: 2026-03-02

Can Your HOA Tow Your Car? Rules & Legal Limits

Key Takeaways
  • HOA towing authority comes from the CC&Rs, but state law sets the floor — notice periods, signage, and fee caps override HOA policy where they conflict.
  • Most states require 24–72 hours written notice before a vehicle can be towed from private property, except for fire lane or emergency blockage situations.
  • Driveways are a gray area — courts in multiple states have ruled HOAs have limited authority over individually owned driveway space unless the CC&Rs explicitly say otherwise.
  • If your car was towed without proper notice or signage, you can dispute the fees in small claims court, typically for a $30–$75 filing fee.
  • RVs, boats, trailers, and commercial vehicles are the most commonly towed vehicle types in HOA communities — check your CC&Rs before parking either one.

According to the Foundation for Community Association Research, about 75.5 million Americans — roughly 30% of all U.S. housing — live under HOA governance. Parking and towing rank among the top three HOA complaint categories nationwide. So if you're dealing with a towing threat or an unexpected bill from an impound lot, you're in very common territory. Here's what you actually need to know.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

Can Your HOA Legally Tow Your Car?

An HOA can legally tow your car if the CC&Rs document a specific parking violation and the HOA follows state private-property towing requirements. The CC&Rs are a recorded legal contract — you accepted them when you bought the home. That contract is what gives the HOA its enforcement teeth. But the HOA towing rules written into those documents don't override state law. Both have to be satisfied.

Think of it as a two-key system. The HOA holds key one: proof that your vehicle violated a rule in the governing documents. The state holds key two: procedural requirements like notice, signage, and licensed tow operators. If either key is missing, the tow is on shaky legal ground.

Common violations that trigger HOA parking enforcement include:

  • Parking in a designated fire lane or emergency access zone
  • Storing an inoperable or unregistered vehicle on common property
  • Parking an RV, boat, or trailer in a visible area against CC&R rules
  • Leaving a vehicle in a guest or reserved space beyond the allowed time

For a broader look at how private-property towing works outside of HOA communities, see our guide to private property towing rules.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

Does an HOA Have to Give Notice Before Towing?

In most states, an HOA must provide written notice — typically 24 to 72 hours in advance — before towing a vehicle from private property. HOA towing without notice is illegal in most jurisdictions unless the vehicle creates an immediate hazard, such as blocking a fire lane or emergency vehicle access.

Here's how notice requirements break down across the major HOA states:

State Statute Required Notice Key Requirement
Florida Fla. Stat. §715.07 24 hours Signs min. 18"×24"; regulated tow fees
Texas Tex. Prop. Code §209.006 Written notice required 10-day cure period for first violation
California Cal. Civil Code §4515 Varies by situation Limits HOA authority on adjacent public streets
Virginia Virginia HOA Act §55.1-1819 Reasonable notice Must follow recorded enforcement procedures
Arizona A.R.S. §33-1818 Required before enforcement HOA must post rules conspicuously

Sources: Florida Legislature (leg.state.fl.us), Texas Legislature (statutes.capitol.texas.gov), California Legislature (leginfo.legislature.ca.gov)

Notice has to be specific — it can't just say "move your car." A proper HOA towing notice identifies the violation, gives a deadline to correct it, and states what happens if you don't. A vague letter slid under your door at midnight almost certainly doesn't meet the legal standard.

If you want to understand how notice requirements fit into the broader landscape of towing rights, our article on nonconsensual towing rights goes deeper.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

Can an HOA Tow a Car From Your Own Driveway?

An HOA can tow from your driveway only if the CC&Rs explicitly grant authority over driveway space and your vehicle violates a specific, documented rule. HOA parking enforcement in common areas — guest lots, shared driveways, streets within the community — is on much firmer legal ground than enforcement on individually owned private driveways.

Courts in Florida, Texas, and California have all issued rulings limiting HOA driveway authority when the CC&Rs weren't specific enough. The general principle: your driveway is part of your lot. Unless the governing documents clearly say the HOA can regulate what sits on your lot, enforcement is contestable.

That said, some violations are almost universally enforceable even on private driveways:

  • Inoperable or unregistered vehicles — nearly every CC&R in the country addresses these
  • Commercial trucks or vehicles over a specified weight — common in residential CC&Rs
  • RVs and trailers visible from the street — frequently restricted and hard to defend

Here's a real scenario: Say your CC&Rs ban "inoperable vehicles" but don't define "inoperable." You've got a project truck on jack stands in your driveway. The HOA sends a towing warning. Your first move is to check whether the truck has a current registration and plates — in most states, a registered vehicle with plates is not legally "abandoned" or "inoperable" by default. You'd also want to pull the exact CC&R language and compare it to your state's definition of "inoperable vehicle" in the motor vehicle code.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

The legal limits on HOA towing include required notice periods, proper signage in common areas, licensed tow operators, state-regulated fee caps, and the requirement that any rule being enforced exists in the recorded CC&Rs. HOA towing laws prohibit arbitrary, selective, or retaliatory enforcement — if the HOA tows your car for a rule it doesn't enforce against anyone else, that's a violation.

Specific limits to know:

Signage: Florida requires towing signs to be at least 18"×24" and posted at all entrances. They must list the towing company's name and phone number. Missing or undersized signs invalidate the tow under Florida Statute §715.07.

Fees: Towing typically runs $150–$350 for the initial tow, plus $20–$75 per day in storage fees according to industry averages. Many states cap these fees for nonconsensual private-property tows. You can challenge fees above the statutory cap under state consumer protection statutes.

Operator licensing: Under FMCSA regulations, tow operators involved in commercial or interstate operations must meet federal requirements. State licensing rules apply to all tow operators — an HOA can't use an unlicensed towing service and expect the tow to hold up legally.

No retaliation: If you filed a complaint against the HOA last week and your car gets towed this week for a "violation" the HOA has ignored for years, document everything. Retaliatory towing is actionable in most states.

For more on predatory towing practices that sometimes show up in HOA communities, see our guide to predatory towing laws. And if you need to estimate what a tow might cost you, our towing cost calculator can help you ballpark the bill.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

How Do You Fight an HOA Tow?

To fight an HOA tow, document every procedural failure you can find, then use the HOA's own dispute resolution process before going to court. HOA parking enforcement disputes are winnable — especially when notice wasn't given, signage was missing, or the rule being enforced isn't actually in the CC&Rs.

Your step-by-step approach:

  1. Photograph everything immediately. The tow zone, any posted signs, the area where your car was parked, and any notice (or lack of it) that you received. Timestamp matters.
  2. Pull your CC&Rs. Look for the specific rule the HOA claims you violated. If it isn't in the recorded documents, it isn't enforceable.
  3. Request the towing authorization record. Most states require the property owner — the HOA — to maintain a written authorization log for every nonconsensual tow. Request it in writing.
  4. File a formal dispute with the HOA board. Most HOA bylaws require the board to offer a hearing. Request one in writing within 10–30 days (check your state's HOA act for the deadline).
  5. Check your state's HOA dispute resolution program. Florida, Virginia, and several other states offer state-managed mediation specifically for HOA disputes — it's cheaper and faster than court.
  6. File in small claims court if needed. If the tow violated state law — missing notice, improper signage, unlicensed operator — you can sue to recover the tow and storage fees. Filing fees run $30–$75 in most jurisdictions.

You can find your state's specific towing rules using our towing laws by state tool, or read through illegal towing complaints to understand what grounds trigger a successful dispute.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

What States Have Laws Restricting HOA Towing?

Several states — including Florida, Texas, California, Virginia, and Arizona — have specific statutes restricting HOA towing authority and setting minimum procedural standards. In states without HOA-specific towing laws, general private-property towing statutes still apply, which typically require signage and limit fees.

Florida leads with the most detailed framework. Florida Statute §715.07 requires 24-hour notice for non-emergency tows, mandates specific signage dimensions (minimum 18"×24"), and caps towing fees. Violations of this statute give the vehicle owner the right to recover the tow and storage costs from whoever authorized the tow — which would be the HOA.

Texas Property Code §209.006 requires written notice and a 10-day opportunity to cure before any enforcement action for a first violation. That 10-day window is significant — it means the HOA generally can't tow your car the first time you park in the wrong spot without warning you first.

California Civil Code §4515 specifically limits HOA authority over street parking on public roads adjacent to the community. If your car is on a public street — even one that runs through the HOA development — the HOA's parking rules may not apply. That said, private community roads are a different matter.

For a full breakdown of towing rules by jurisdiction, see our towing laws by state guide and the DOT towing regulations overview.


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TOWING LAWS & REGULATIONS

Can an HOA Tow a Guest's or Visitor's Car?

An HOA can tow a guest's car if it violates posted parking rules — but the same legal standards apply: proper signage, notice where required, and a documented rule in the CC&Rs. Homeowner association towing of visitor vehicles spikes during the holiday season (November through January) when guest parking fills up fast.

If your visitor's car gets towed, the HOA's liability depends on whether signage was adequate and visible. Courts have held that guests are bound by posted rules they can reasonably read. But if the "No Overnight Parking" sign was hidden behind a bush or too small to meet state requirements, that's a valid challenge.

Practically speaking, you — the homeowner — should brief guests on parking rules before they arrive. Under many HOA bylaws, you can be fined for your guest's violation even if their car is the one towed. Guest parking disputes are among the most common reasons homeowners end up in front of the HOA board.

One honest limitation worth stating clearly: even if the HOA tow was procedurally perfect and completely legal, getting your money back for a valid tow is nearly impossible. Fighting a lawful tow is not a winning battle. Your energy is better spent disputing procedural violations — those are the cases that actually settle in homeowners' favor.

For additional context on how towing laws vary, check our full breakdown of towing laws by state and the guide to towing lien laws, which covers what happens when storage fees pile up on an unclaimed vehicle.


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Sources & Methodology

1. **Florida Legislature — Florida Statute §715.07** (flsenate.gov): Used for Florida-specific notice, signage, and fee requirements.

Mark

Founder & Automotive Writer

Mark Benson is a lifelong car enthusiast with roots in a family-run auto repair shop. With years of hands-on experience in the automotive industry, Mark founded RevFrenzy to help drivers make informed decisions about towing, truck capacity, and roadside assistance.

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Frequently Asked Questions

In most states, no. HOA towing without notice is illegal except for fire lane or emergency access violations. States like Florida and Texas require written notice before any non-emergency tow. Check your state's private-property towing statute for the exact notice window.

If your HOA towed your car without proper notice or signage, you can file a formal dispute with the board, request a hearing, and sue in small claims court to recover tow and storage fees. Filing typically costs $30–$75, and procedural violations often result in full fee recovery.

Yes, in most cases. RVs, boats, and trailers are the most commonly restricted vehicle types in HOA communities. If your CC&Rs ban visible storage of these vehicles, the HOA generally has grounds to tow or fine — even from your own driveway.

Yes. State law requires tow operators to be licensed, and an HOA cannot authorize an unlicensed tow service. Using an unlicensed operator is grounds to challenge the tow and potentially recover all fees in states with strict private-property towing statutes.

Yes, depending on your state and CC&Rs. Some HOAs issue a fine first, then escalate to towing for repeat violations. Texas law requires a 10-day cure period before enforcement on a first offense, but subsequent violations can result in both fines and towing simultaneously.

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