The HOA Architectural Review Process: A Step-by-Step Guide
Most disputes between homeowners and associations start here — at the request to change something. This guide walks through architectural review from application to final inspection, so boards run a defensible process and homeowners know what to expect.
What is architectural review?
Architectural review is the process an HOA uses to evaluate proposed exterior changes — additions, paint colors, fences, roofs, solar, landscaping, and more — against the community's recorded standards. It's typically run by an Architectural Review Committee (ARC), sometimes called an Architectural Control Committee (ACC) or Design Review Board, operating under authority granted by the CC&Rs.
A good process protects everyone: it keeps neighborhoods cohesive, gives owners a fair and predictable path, and shields the board from claims of arbitrary or selective enforcement. The flowchart below shows the path a typical request travels.
The architectural review process, step by step
A typical path. Your community's CC&Rs and state law set the exact timelines and requirements.
Homeowner submits an application
The owner files a written request — usually a form plus drawings, specifications, materials, colors, and a site plan showing the proposed change.
Completeness & acknowledgment
The manager or ARC confirms the application is complete and logs the received date. Missing information is requested now — this is where the review clock usually starts.
ARC review against the guidelines
The committee evaluates the request against the design standards — setbacks, materials, color palette, height, and any state-protected items (solar, EV, landscaping) that can't be denied.
Decision issued in writing
The ARC returns a written decision within the required window. One of three outcomes:
✓ Approved
Owner may proceed as submitted, within any stated time limit to begin and complete work.
~ Approved with conditions
Approved subject to changes — e.g. a different color, screening, or placement. Owner accepts or revises.
✕ Denied
Request declined with the specific reason(s) and the standard it violates. Owner may revise or appeal.
Appeal or resubmission (if needed)
Many CC&Rs give owners a right to appeal a denial to the board or a hearing. The owner may also revise and resubmit to address the cited issues.
Work is performed
Once approved, the owner completes the work as approved — matching the submitted plans, materials, and any conditions. Deviations can trigger a new violation.
Final review & close-out
The ARC or manager confirms the completed work matches what was approved and closes the file. The record is retained for future enforcement and resale disclosures.
How to run it well
For boards & ARC members
- Decide against written, published standards — never personal taste. Consistency is your legal shield.
- Log the received date and calendar the response deadline on every application.
- Put every decision in writing, with the specific guideline behind any denial or condition.
- Carve out state-protected items (solar, EV charging, drought/native landscaping) so you regulate placement, not existence.
- Apply standards evenly — selective enforcement is the most common way associations lose.
- Keep a retained record of approvals for enforcement and resale disclosures.
For homeowners
- Apply before you build. Retroactive requests are the hardest to win and risk removal orders.
- Submit a complete package — drawings, dimensions, materials, colors, and a site plan. Complete files move faster.
- Reference the specific guideline your request satisfies; it makes approval easy.
- Get the decision and any conditions in writing, and note the response deadline.
- If denied, ask for the exact reason and whether you can revise or appeal.
- Know your state carve-outs — solar, EV, and landscaping protections may override a denial.
Common reasons applications get denied
Most denials trace back to a handful of avoidable issues.
Incomplete application
Missing drawings, dimensions, materials, or a site plan — the most frequent and most fixable reason for delay or denial.
Conflicts with the guidelines
Proposed color, material, height, or setback falls outside the published standards.
Started without approval
Work begun or completed before review — now a violation as well as an application.
Neighbor / sightline impact
Drainage, privacy, or view impacts on adjacent lots that the standards address.
Insufficient detail
The committee can't tell exactly what's proposed, so it can't responsibly approve it.
Overreach by the ARC
Denying a state-protected item (solar, EV, drought landscaping) the association can only condition, not prohibit — a denial that won't hold up.
Frequently asked questions
The questions boards, managers, and homeowners ask most about architectural review.
How long does an HOA have to respond to an architectural request?
What happens if I make a change without HOA approval?
Can an HOA deny my application for any reason?
What is the difference between an ARC and the board?
Can I appeal a denied architectural request?
What should a complete architectural application include?
Is your review process protecting the board — or exposing it?
The HOA Architect helps communities modernize architectural guidelines and review procedures so decisions are consistent, defensible, and good for the neighborhood. Let's review yours.
Start a conversationDisclaimer: This guide is a general informational overview compiled June 2026 and is not legal advice. Architectural review requirements, timelines, and appeal rights vary by community and by state. Always confirm the current rules in your governing documents and applicable state law, and consult a licensed community-association attorney before relying on this for a specific decision or dispute.