Tampa HOA assessments are governed by Florida Chapter 720, which requires written notice of assessments, sets late-fee and interest caps, and provides strict lien-and-foreclosure procedures. SB 1422 (2022) added reserve study requirements and transparency on how assessments are spent.
Florida Statute Chapter 720 governs how Tampa HOAs levy, collect, and enforce assessments. Regular assessments must be approved by the board under authority granted in the declaration and budgeted annually with member-meeting notice of the proposed budget at least 14 days in advance. Special assessments require similar notice identifying the specific purpose and estimated cost. Late fees on delinquent assessments are capped at the greater of $25 or 5 percent of the overdue installment (ยง720.3085), and interest cannot exceed 18 percent per year. After 45 days' delinquency, the HOA may record a claim of lien against the unit after sending a statutory pre-lien notice; after another 45 days, the HOA may file for foreclosure. Owners are entitled to a statement of account within 10 business days of a written request. SB 1422 (2022) and HB 1203 (2024) require more robust financial disclosures: Tampa HOAs with 100+ parcels must publish budgets, reserve studies, and annual financial reports on an accessible website. Reserve funding must be based on a reserve study unless members affirmatively waive it annually. Owners can dispute assessments through DBPR mediation, and a 2023 law limits the ability of HOAs to foreclose solely over fines (but not unpaid assessments). Estoppel fee caps are set by statute, currently $299 for routine requests.
Specific penalty amounts for this ordinance are not published in a publicly accessible fine schedule. Contact Tampa code enforcement directly for current fines, enforcement procedures, and hearing options.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Tampa, FL
Tampa sets decibel limits in Chapter 14 of the City Code and in zoning performance standards, with lower thresholds at night and in residential receiving zon...
Tampa, FL
Industrial noise in Tampa is regulated through Chapter 14 of the City Code combined with zoning performance standards in the Land Development Code. Industria...
Tampa, FL
Tampa City Code Chapter 14, Article III, Sec. 14-151 caps residential noise at 55 dBA between 10:00 PM and 7:00 AM and 60 dBA daytime, measured at the receiv...
Tampa, FL
Outdoor music at restaurants, bars, and event venues in Tampa is regulated by Chapter 14 and by zoning conditions on outdoor entertainment. Venues generally ...
Tampa, FL
Tampa requires a building permit for any retaining wall over 3 feet tall measured from the bottom of the footing to the top of the wall, or any wall supporti...
Tampa, FL
Tampa enforces the Florida Building Code and the Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act (Chapter 515, Florida Statutes) requiring all new residential swimming ...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Hillsborough County.
See how other cities in Hillsborough County handle assessment & dues.
See how Tampa's assessment & dues rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.