HOA architectural review in Orange County communities is governed by individual CC&Rs and the Davis-Stirling Act. Most large unincorporated communities require prior approval for exterior modifications. California law limits HOA authority over solar panels, drought-tolerant landscaping, EV chargers, and political signs.
Large HOA-governed communities in unincorporated Orange County including Coto de Caza, Ladera Ranch, Rancho Mission Viejo, and others maintain architectural review committees (ARCs) that must approve exterior modifications before work begins. Review typically covers paint colors, fencing, roofing, additions, landscaping changes, and hardscape. California law limits HOA authority in several areas: Civil Code 714 protects solar panel installation; Civil Code 4735 prohibits bans on drought-tolerant landscaping; Civil Code 4745 protects EV charger installation; Civil Code 4710 limits restrictions on political signs. ARCs must respond to applications within 60 days or the application is deemed approved per Civil Code 4765. Denials must be in writing with specific reasons. Owners who proceed without approval may face fines, removal orders, and liens. Appeals processes vary by community.
Unapproved exterior modifications may result in fines, forced removal, and assessment liens. ARCs cannot charge unreasonable review fees. Denials violating state-protected categories (solar, EV, drought-tolerant landscaping) are unenforceable.
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See how Orange County's architectural review rules stack up against other locations.
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