San Antonio has a large and growing base of association-governed neighborhoods, including master-planned subdivisions, gated communities, townhome developments, and condominium projects. As the metro expands, disputes over assessments, architectural approvals, deed restrictions, and board authority are increasingly common.
Attorneys serving San Antonio community associations and owners often advise on restrictive covenants, collections, foreclosure notices, records requests, election issues, and rule enforcement. Local familiarity can matter because association disputes may involve both state law and county-level court practices.
For most Texas residential subdivisions, Texas Property Code Chapter 209 is the key statutory framework. Condominium communities are generally governed by Chapter 82, along with the association's declaration and bylaws.
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Many residential property owners associations in San Antonio are subject to Texas Property Code Chapter 209. Condominium associations are generally governed by Chapter 82. The recorded governing documents are also central.
Texas associations can usually collect assessments if authorized by their governing documents, but collection and foreclosure procedures are subject to Texas law. An attorney can evaluate notices, account history, and available defenses.
Consider legal help when a dispute involves fines, assessments, foreclosure threats, records access, board elections, architectural denials, or enforcement of restrictive covenants.
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