HOA QuestionsColoradoDo you have the right to see HOA financial records and meeting minutes?
CO·Colorado Revised Statutes §38-33.3

Do you have the right to see HOA financial records and meeting minutes?

Quick Answer

Yes. Nearly every state gives homeowners the right to inspect HOA financial records, budgets, contracts, and meeting minutes, usually with a written request and reasonable notice.

The General Rule

State HOA statutes almost universally grant homeowners the right to inspect association records, including financial statements, budgets, reserve studies, vendor contracts, insurance policies, and board meeting minutes. This transparency right exists because owners fund the association through dues and assessments and are entitled to verify how funds are spent. To exercise this right, submit a written request specifying the records you want; the association typically has a statutory window (often 5-10 business days) to make records available for inspection or copying, sometimes for a reasonable copying fee. Associations can usually withhold records related to pending litigation, personnel matters, and individual homeowner violation files (to protect other owners' privacy).

Colorado-Specific Rules

COColorado Revised Statutes §38-33.3

Colorado §38-33.3-317 mirrors most other states, requiring reasonable access within a set timeframe and allowing a reasonable fee for copies.

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

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Same question, other states