Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/hoa-decoderDecode HOA covenants (CC&Rs) and the fee structure before you buy into them. Use when someone asks 'what do these HOA rules actually mean', 'decode these CC&Rs', 'is this HOA going to be a problem', or 'what should I check before buying in an HOA'. Produces a restriction decode ranked by lifestyle impact, special-assessment exposure analysis, enforcement and fine mechanics, and the exact records to request before buying.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/hoa-decoderBuying into an HOA means joining a tiny government with taxing power over you. This skill reads the CC&Rs like a friend who's sat through the board meetings: which rules will change how you live, how big the surprise bills can get, and which records to demand first.
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided:
Walk the documents for: use restrictions, assessment mechanics (dues-increase caps; approval threshold; no stated cap = flag), rental restrictions (caps, waitlists, minimum terms, grandfathering), enforcement chain (notice → hearing → fine → lien; quote each step), amendment rules (how easily rules can change under you). Where enforceability is questionable, flag "enforceability varies by jurisdiction — verify locally" rather than declaring it void.
1. The verdict — buy comfortably / buy with eyes open / this HOA will fight your lifestyle — in three sentences.
2. Restrictions ranked by impact on you
| Restriction (§) | What it says | How it hits your plans | Severity |
|---|
3. 💸 Money exposure — dues today, increase mechanics, special-assessment rules quoted, the realistic worst-case bill; fine schedule and lien path.
4. 🚩 Red flags, ranked — quoted language, the scenario where it bites, severity.
5. Records to request before buying — reserve study (and funding level), 24 months of board minutes, budget and delinquency rate, master insurance policy, pending/past special assessments and litigation, rental cap status and waitlist.
6. Questions for the board/manager — fee-escalation history ("dues for each of the last 5 years?"), upcoming major repairs, how often fines are actually levied.
End the artifact with, verbatim: "This is a plain-language reading, not legal/financial advice — laws vary by jurisdiction; confirm anything load-bearing with a qualified professional."
Buyer-side HOA due-diligence practice — CC&R triage, assessment-exposure analysis, records checklists.