Practice Area

HOA Receivership — When a Court Takes Over an Association

Texas District Court · CPRC § 64.001

Situation — How This Comes Up

Our HOA is completely dysfunctional and no one is maintaining the community. Is there any way to force action?

What You Need to Know First

A Texas court can appoint a receiver to take over an HOA that is failing to perform its basic functions. Receivership is a drastic remedy — but it is available when the association’s dysfunction is causing irreparable harm to the community.

Full Analysis

Texas courts have authority to appoint a receiver over a dysfunctional HOA as an equitable remedy. Grounds for receivership include financial mismanagement, failure to maintain common areas, complete board deadlock, and conduct threatening imminent harm to the community.

Facing This Issue Right Now?

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The information on this page is for general informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney–client relationship. © 2026 Silachi Law Firm, PLLC · Texas Bar No. 24118480