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    How to Document HOA Violations

    To document an HOA violation — or defend yourself against a false one — photograph the disputed condition, surrounding properties for comparison, and any posted notices on the same day. SnapProof adds a verified timestamp, GPS, and a cryptographic fingerprint designed to detect later edits, giving the board independently verifiable photo evidence rather than competing claims.

    Whether you're filing a complaint or fighting one — evidence wins.

    4 min read

    📋

    Filing Against

    Violation photos

    🛡️

    Defending

    Compliance photos

    Two Sides of HOA Documentation

    This guide covers both scenarios: documenting violations BY your neighbors that the HOA ignores, and defending yourself against unfair HOA violations. In both cases, timestamped evidence is your strongest tool.

    If Your HOA Won't Enforce Rules

    Document the violations yourself following the rules for documenting evidence: photos with timestamps and GPS showing your neighbor's violations, dates and duration of each violation, your complaints to the HOA with dates, the HOA's response or lack thereof, and evidence of selective enforcement if they enforce rules against some residents but not others.

    If You're Fighting an Unfair Violation

    Document your compliance: photos proving your property meets HOA standards, timestamps proving when work was completed, before/after photos of any corrections, all communication with the HOA board, evidence of selective enforcement against you.

    Building Your Case

    HOA disputes come down to evidence. Boards respond to organized, dated documentation. Attorneys evaluate HOA cases based on documented patterns. Courts need timestamped proof. Whether you're complaining or defending, the process is the same: document everything, create a timeline, show the pattern.

    FAQ

    HOAs must follow their own procedures. If you can show they didn't follow protocol or are selectively enforcing, you have grounds to dispute.

    Yes, and document them. Take notes, photograph any relevant presentations, and follow up in writing.

    Document that too. Retaliatory fines or enforcement after a complaint strengthens your legal position.

    Play by the rules. Document the proof.

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