HOA assessments in North Richland Hills are governed by CCRs and Texas Property Code 209, which regulates notice, delinquency procedures, and foreclosure. Associations must provide itemized statements, apply payments in a set statutory order, and follow notice and hearing rules before foreclosing on homes for unpaid dues.
Assessment collection in NRH HOAs is tightly regulated under Texas Property Code 209. Annual and special assessments must be adopted per the CCRs, and owners are entitled to an itemized statement showing the assessment, interest, late fees, attorney fees, and any other charges on request. When payments are received, Section 209.0063 requires them to be applied first to delinquent assessments, then current assessments, then attorney fees and costs related to delinquent assessments, then fines, and last to other amounts. Before foreclosing, the HOA must follow enhanced notice procedures under Section 209.0092: a notice of delinquency sent by certified mail, a 30-day cure opportunity, an opportunity for a payment plan in many cases, and a separate notice of intent to foreclose. Non-judicial foreclosure is allowed if the CCRs provide and statutory steps are followed. Chapter 209 also caps certain fines and assessments, prohibits retaliatory actions, and gives owners the right to redeem a foreclosed home within 180 days for residential property. NRH does not intervene in HOA collections; contested assessments must be resolved through the association's process and ultimately state court or arbitration.
Contact your local code enforcement office for specific penalty information.
See how other cities in Tarrant County handle assessment & dues.
See how North Richland Hills's assessment & dues rules stack up against other locations.
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