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☀️ Solar Energy/HOA Restrictions

HOA Restrictions: Owasso vs Tulsa

How do hoa restrictions rules compare between Owasso, OK and Tulsa, OK?

Owasso and Tulsa have similar restriction levels.

Owasso, OK

Tulsa County

Some Restrictions

Oklahoma's Solar Rights Act (60 O.S. §825 et seq.) is considered weak—it allows HOAs to impose 'reasonable restrictions' on solar installations and does not automatically void anti-solar CC&Rs. Tulsa County homeowners in HOAs must navigate architectural review, though outright bans are generally unenforceable.

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Tulsa, OK

Tulsa County

Some Restrictions

Oklahoma law (Title 17 §160.10) protects homeowners' right to install solar energy systems and prohibits HOAs from effectively banning solar installations. HOAs may impose reasonable aesthetic requirements but cannot make solar installation impractical or prohibitively expensive.

View full Tulsa rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactOwassoTulsa
State Law60 O.S. §825 (weak)OK Title 17 §160.10
HOA RestrictionsReasonable allowed-
Cost Impact LimitTypically 5-10%-
Approval DeadlineNot set by statute-
EnforcementCivil litigation-
HOA Ban-Prohibited by state law
Cost Impact-Restrictions cannot increase cost >10%
Efficiency Impact-Cannot reduce output >10%
Approval-HOA may require plans but not unreasonably delay

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Owasso FAQ

Can my Tulsa County HOA ban solar panels outright?

An outright ban is difficult to enforce under 60 O.S. §825, but HOAs can impose reasonable aesthetic restrictions. Unlike Texas or California, Oklahoma gives HOAs more latitude, so review your CC&Rs carefully before installing.

How long should HOA approval take?

Oklahoma law does not set a statutory deadline (unlike Texas' 60 days). HOAs typically process requests in 30-60 days, but enforcement against delay requires civil action.

Tulsa FAQ

Can my HOA ban solar panels in Tulsa?

No. Oklahoma law prohibits HOAs from effectively banning solar installations. HOAs may impose reasonable aesthetic requirements that don't increase cost or reduce efficiency by more than 10%.

What if my HOA denies my solar panel application?

If the denial effectively prevents installation or unreasonably increases cost, it may violate Oklahoma's solar access law. You may challenge the decision in court.

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