Notice after foreclosure sale
- Statute:
- Texas Sec.209.010 · Chapter PR-209 (Property Code Ch. 209 (Texas Residential Property Owners Protection Act))
- Topic:
- Assessments & Finance · Post-foreclosure notice
- Applies to:
- HOA associations
Within 30 days of a foreclosure sale, the association must mail notice of the sale to the former owner by certified mail.
📄 Read the official text at statutes.capitol.texas.gov →
How SoShiny helps with Notice after foreclosure sale
SoShiny calculates per-unit assessments automatically from ownership percentages and tracks payment status against every levy. The unit-level ledger is the audit trail your CPA, attorney, and the board need when an owner disputes a charge.
See the feature → Start freeFrequently asked
- What does Texas Sec.209.010 require?
- Within 30 days of a foreclosure sale, the association must mail notice of the sale to the former owner by certified mail.
- Who does Texas Sec.209.010 apply to?
- Texas Sec.209.010 applies to HOA associations in Texas.
- What happens if our HOA doesn't comply with Sec.209.010?
- Non-compliance with this Texas statute can expose the association and individual directors to civil suit. Texas HOAs are not centrally regulated — enforcement is private. SoShiny's audit trail and documented workflows are designed to demonstrate good-faith compliance if a member challenges a board action.
- Where can I read the official text of Texas Sec.209.010?
- The official text is published by the Texas Legislature at statutes.capitol.texas.gov. The summary on this page is for plain-English reference only and is not legal advice.
- How does SoShiny help with Notice after foreclosure sale?
- SoShiny calculates per-unit assessments automatically from ownership percentages and tracks payment status against every levy. The unit-level ledger is the audit trail your CPA, attorney, and the board need when an owner disputes a charge. Learn more →
Not legal advice. This page is a plain-English summary of Texas Sec.209.010 prepared by SoShiny for board members and managers. For binding legal advice or interpretation, consult a Texas-licensed attorney. For the official statutory text, see the link above.
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