Missouri has no statute that caps HOA fines, sets a notice period, or requires a hearing before a non-condo association penalizes an owner — fine authority comes entirely from the recorded declaration and bylaws. For condominiums, § 448.3-116 lets the association collect fines through the same lien used for assessments.
Because Missouri has no comprehensive non-condo HOA act, fine power for an ordinary homeowners' association is whatever the recorded covenants and bylaws grant; the state imposes no dollar cap and no mandatory notice-and-hearing procedure. The only statutory hook is for condominiums: § 448.3-116 provides that the association's lien covers 'fines imposed against its unit owner from the time the assessment or fine becomes due' — meaning a condo fine can ride the same foreclosable lien as unpaid dues. Owners' procedural protections in a Missouri HOA therefore rest on the governing documents and on general contract and common-law limits rather than on any fine statute.
No specific statutory penalty. Fine amounts, the conduct that triggers them, and any notice or hearing rights are set only by the recorded declaration and bylaws. For condominiums, an unpaid fine becomes part of the § 448.3-116 assessment lien and is enforceable through foreclosure.
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