Indiana's HOA Act mandates transparency. Under Ind. Code § 32-25.5-3-3, the annual budget must be approved by a majority of members at a meeting, members may attend board meetings, and financial records are open to inspection. Ind. Code § 32-25.5-3-4 requires two meetings before a contract raising an assessment over $500/member. Corporate governance follows the Indiana Nonprofit Corporation Act (Ind. Code § 23-17).
Ind. Code § 32-25.5-3-3 requires the annual budget to be "approved at a meeting ... by a majority of the members ... in attendance"; members must get the proposed budget (or notice it is available free) and notice of any assessment change beforehand. Without a quorum, the board may adopt a budget up to 100% of the last approved budget - or 110% if the governing documents allow. The same section gives members "the right to attend any meeting of the homeowners association board" (closed session is allowed for delinquent accounts or litigation with counsel), opens financial records to inspection on written request, requires retention of financial-transaction communications for at least two years, and caps record-search fees (first hour free, then up to $35/hour, $200 maximum). Under Ind. Code § 32-25.5-3-4, a board may not enter a contract that creates or increases an assessment by more than $500 per year per affected member unless it holds at least two association meetings. Elections and corporate formalities run under the Indiana Nonprofit Corporation Act, Ind. Code § 23-17.
No specific statutory penalty. If a board adopts a budget without member approval, holds a covered contract vote without two meetings, denies record inspection, or bars members from a board meeting, a member's recourse is to demand compliance and, if needed, seek a court order.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Anderson, IN
Anderson's Water Pollution Control Utility runs a Yard and Garden Recycling Center at 2000 W. Eighth St. that beneficially reuses brush, leaves, and grass. H...
Anderson, IN
Anderson publishes no ordinance banning artificial turf, so synthetic lawns are generally allowed on residential property. Installation may still need to mee...
Anderson, IN
Anderson has no ordinance banning native or pollinator plantings, but its 12-inch grass-and-weed nuisance rule still applies. Maintained native beds are fine...
Anderson, IN
Indiana broadly allows residential rainwater collection, and Anderson publishes no ordinance banning rain barrels or cisterns. Homeowners may collect rooftop...
Anderson, IN
Anderson runs its own municipal Water Department and publishes no permanent odd/even or seasonal lawn-watering restrictions. Watering is generally unrestrict...
Anderson, IN
Anderson treats grass over 12 inches and rank vegetation as a nuisance. The Environmental Nuisance Control Division inspects, notices, and abates overgrown l...
See how Anderson's board procedures rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.