Georgia gives homeowners few statutory protections against HOA covenants. There is NO Georgia statute barring an HOA from prohibiting solar panels—a 2022 bill (HB 483) to do so died in committee. The 1978 Solar Easement Act (O.C.G.A. § 44-9-20 et seq.) only lets owners negotiate sunlight easements. Flag display relies on federal law with no private remedy.
Georgia has not enacted the solar-access and flag protections common in other states. HB 483 (2021-2022), which would have barred POAs from enforcing covenants that infringe a lot owner's right to install a solar energy device, failed to clear committee, so no such statute exists. The only solar law, the Solar Easement Act, O.C.G.A. § 44-9-20 through § 44-9-24, merely authorizes owners to voluntarily create recorded sunlight easements—it does not override HOA covenants. For the U.S. flag, no Georgia statute applies; the federal Freedom to Display the American Flag Act of 2005, 4 U.S.C. § 5, bars associations from restricting display (subject to reasonable time/place/manner rules) but courts note it 'does not contain an enforcement mechanism.' Georgia courts routinely uphold covenants the buyer accepted at purchase.
Not applicable—this topic describes the limits on HOA power. Because Georgia lacks solar and flag statutes overriding covenants, an HOA may generally enforce reasonable restrictions on panels or flags; the homeowner's recourse is the declaration's own terms or, after 2027, the SB 406 Secretary of State complaint process.
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