Texas Sec.209.0185

Regulation of standby electric generators

Statute:
Texas Sec.209.0185 · Chapter PR-209 (Property Code Ch. 209 (Texas Residential Property Owners Protection Act))
Topic:
Architectural Control · Generators
Applies to:
HOA associations

Owners may install standby electric generators. HOAs may regulate location, screening, and noise but cannot ban.

generator; standby; emergency; protected; aesthetic regulation

📄 Read the official text at statutes.capitol.texas.gov →

How SoShiny helps with Regulation of standby electric generators

SoShiny runs the full architectural review workflow — submission, photo upload, board review, comments, approval or denial, decision letter — with documented response timelines that meet statutory ARC requirements.

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Frequently asked

What does Texas Sec.209.0185 require?
Owners may install standby electric generators. HOAs may regulate location, screening, and noise but cannot ban.
Who does Texas Sec.209.0185 apply to?
Texas Sec.209.0185 applies to HOA associations in Texas.
What happens if our HOA doesn't comply with Sec.209.0185?
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.209.0185?
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 Regulation of standby electric generators?
SoShiny runs the full architectural review workflow — submission, photo upload, board review, comments, approval or denial, decision letter — with documented response timelines that meet statutory ARC requirements. Learn more →

Not legal advice. This page is a plain-English summary of Texas Sec.209.0185 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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