If you live in an HOA community in Central Florida, exterior maintenance isn't optional. Most homeowner associations have specific standards for the appearance of your home, driveway, pool cage, and roof. And in Florida’s climate, those surfaces get dirty fast.
This covers HOA exterior maintenance requirements, what happens when you fall behind, and how regular cleaning keeps you compliant.
Common HOA Exterior Maintenance Requirements
HOA covenants vary, but most communities in Volusia, Seminole, and Orange County include some version of the following exterior maintenance requirements. HOA-heavy areas like Sanford are especially strict about exterior upkeep:
- Home exterior must be free of visible mold, mildew, algae, and staining. This includes all siding, stucco, fascia, and soffits.
- Driveways and walkways must be clean and free of oil stains, rust, and significant discoloration.
- Roof must be free of dark streaks, moss, and debris accumulation.
- Pool cage and screen enclosures must be clean and in good repair. Algae-covered screens are a common violation trigger.
- Fences must be maintained and free of excessive discoloration or biological growth.
The language in most covenants is intentionally broad. Phrases like “maintained in good condition” and “kept in a neat and attractive manner” give the HOA board significant discretion in deciding what constitutes a violation.
What Happens When You Get a Violation Letter
Most Florida HOAs follow a standard enforcement process. First, you receive a courtesy notice or warning letter identifying the violation and giving you a deadline to correct it, typically 14 to 30 days. If the issue isn't resolved by the deadline, you receive a formal violation notice.
After that, the HOA can impose daily fines, which in Florida can be up to $100 per day and up to $1,000 in aggregate per violation under state statute. Some communities have stricter fine schedules in their governing documents. In severe cases, the HOA can place a lien on your property.
The good news: most exterior maintenance violations are straightforward to resolve. A single professional cleaning visit usually brings your property back into compliance. If you've received a violation letter, the fastest path to resolution is to schedule a cleaning, get it done, and notify your HOA that the issue has been addressed.
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Get a Free EstimateWhich Services Keep You Compliant
Here are the cleaning services that address the most common HOA violations we see:
- Soft wash for house exterior. Removes mold, mildew, and algae from stucco, siding, and painted surfaces without damaging the finish. This addresses the most visible and most commonly cited violations.
- Driveway and sidewalk pressure washing. Strips out dirt, tire marks, oil stains, and algae from all concrete surfaces. HOAs pay close attention to driveways because they are the first thing visible from the street.
- Pool cage cleaning. Removes green algae and mildew from every screen panel and aluminum frame. A green pool cage is one of the most common violations in Florida HOA communities.
- Roof soft wash. Eliminates black streaks and bacterial growth from shingle and tile roofs. Some HOAs conduct periodic roof inspections; others act only on visible issues.
How Regular Maintenance Prevents Violations
The most effective strategy is to clean your property on a regular schedule rather than waiting for a violation notice. For most HOA homes in Central Florida, we recommend a full exterior cleaning every 12 months. This typically includes the house wash, driveway, sidewalks, and pool cage.
Annual cleaning is usually sufficient to stay ahead of HOA standards because it prevents heavy buildup from ever developing. You avoid the violation letters, the fines, and the stress of scrambling to find a cleaning company on short notice during the busy season.
Some of our customers schedule their annual cleaning for the same month every year. It becomes part of regular home maintenance, just like changing HVAC filters or servicing the sprinkler system.
Florida-Specific Considerations
Florida’s climate makes exterior maintenance more demanding than almost anywhere else in the country. The combination of high humidity, frequent rain, and warm temperatures creates ideal conditions for rapid biological growth. Algae and mold that might take two to three years to appear in drier states can show up in six months here.
That's why Florida HOAs tend to be more aggressive about exterior maintenance than HOAs in other parts of the country. They know that if standards aren't enforced, properties deteriorate quickly, which affects property values across the entire community.
The rainy season, roughly June through October, doubles the growth rate. Homes that are cleaned in March or April often start showing visible algae on north-facing walls by late summer. This is normal for Florida and doesn't necessarily mean you need a second cleaning. But if your HOA conducts inspections in the fall, an early spring cleaning keeps you compliant through the inspection period.