State governing act
Arizona Planned Communities Act (Title 33)
Rolling out the agenda
A board-ready cheat sheet for Buckeye: where city code ends, where your HOA covenants begin, and how to stay aligned with Arizona Planned Communities Act (Title 33).
State governing act
Arizona Planned Communities Act (Title 33)
County jurisdiction
Maricopa County
County recording office
Maricopa County Recorder
County recording office
Maricopa County Recorder
Buckeye municipal code
Buckeye may regulate short-term rentals under A.R.S. Title 9 and local zoning, including registration and tax requirements. Arizona Revised Statutes also address HOA authority—boards must compare city STR rules with recorded declarations before fining owners.
HOA governing documents
HOAs enforce recorded use restrictions (minimum lease terms, guest limits, parking) when consistent with applicable city licensure and state law. Covenant enforcement requires notice, cure periods, and uniform application.
Zoning & building code
Municipal zoning in Buckeye governs fence height and setback. HOAs may adopt design standards in declarations if they comply with Arizona Planned Community Act requirements and are enforced uniformly.
Permit thresholds
Building permits are required for regulated work under the city/county building safety department serving Buckeye. HOA design review does not replace permits.
HOA architectural control
HOAs review fences and additions through architectural committees under CC&Rs. Municipal compliance alone does not satisfy HOA design or notice requirements.
State / local protections
A.R.S. §33-1816 restricts HOAs from prohibiting solar energy devices in many planned communities, subject to reasonable rules on location and aesthetics. Desert landscaping and xeriscape are widely protected from unreasonable bans when compliant with municipal water ordinances.
What HOAs may still regulate
HOAs may adopt reasonable design rules that meet statutory tests (location, color, timeline). Associations cannot impose outright bans where state law voids them.
Municipal trash schedules, curb placement, and code enforcement pathways.
City code and hauler franchises govern collection schedules and bulk pickup in Buckeye. Code enforcement addresses weeds, inoperable vehicles, and similar nuisances as defined locally.
Mediation, courts, and state resources when board actions are challenged.
Parties may use ADR required by covenants, private mediation, or Arizona courts. Justice Court limits apply in Maricopa County—confirm with the clerk. Arizona Department of Real Estate provides consumer brochures on planned communities.
Local ordinances and CC&Rs often overlap here. Document board decisions and give residents clear notice through your community portal.
Board checklist
Local ordinances and CC&Rs often overlap here. Document board decisions and give residents clear notice through your community portal.
Board checklist
Local ordinances and CC&Rs often overlap here. Document board decisions and give residents clear notice through your community portal.
Board checklist
Late fee estimator
Enter your typical monthly assessment to see how local caps may apply. KindHOA can automate notices and fee schedules once your board defines the rules.
Estimated legal ceiling
$15.00
Many associations cannot assess late fees until accounts are at least 30 days past due and proper notice has been sent. You entered 15 days past due.
Tell us about your community. We'll show you how KindHOA automates dues, late fees, and resident communication — free for self-managed HOAs.
No per-door fees. No enterprise bloat. Just the tools your neighbors need to run Buckeye with confidence.