The General Rule
As EV adoption accelerates, state legislatures are increasingly protecting residents' rights to charge at home. In single-family homes, you typically have broad rights to install a Level 2 charger in your own garage. In condos and attached communities with shared parking, it is more complex — HOAs may regulate installation standards, require licensed electricians, and address shared electrical infrastructure. HOAs cannot ban EV chargers outright in states with EV charging rights laws, but they can impose reasonable requirements.
Arizona-Specific Rules
Arizona §33-1816 prohibits HOA boards from banning EV chargers in single-family communities. HOAs can require approval and set installation standards.
Why Your CC&Rs May Be Different
State law sets the minimum floor — but your community's CC&Rs, bylaws, and board-adopted rules may be stricter, may include exceptions, or may have been amended recently. The only way to know exactly what applies to your community is to read your specific governing documents.
Most CC&Rs are 40–120 pages of dense legal language. Finding the exact section that answers your question can take 20–30 minutes — if you can find it at all.
Get the exact answer from YOUR community's documents
Upload your CC&Rs and bylaws. Covrly reads them and answers any question with the exact page and section cited. Works on scanned PDFs. No account needed.