Texas lets HOAs enforce architectural standards, but the Legislature has carved out a notable list of improvements an association can't flatly prohibit. The biggest is solar: Texas law makes a restrictive covenant that prohibits or restricts a 'solar energy device' generally void, allowing only limited, defined conditions (and even those can't substantially raise cost or reduce efficiency). A board that denies rooftop solar outright is on the wrong side of the statute.
Texas also protects an owner's right to display the U.S. and Texas flags (and certain others) on a freestanding pole or the dwelling, within reasonable size and number limits; the right to install rainwater-harvesting systems; and the right to use drought-resistant landscaping and water-conserving turf. These statutory protections override contrary covenants and architectural-committee denials.
Standards must be recorded and applied fairly
Beyond the specific carve-outs, the architectural standards themselves have to come from recorded dedicatory instruments and be applied consistently. An ARC denial based on a standard that was never recorded, or that approved your neighbor's identical project, is vulnerable — recorded-rule and selective-enforcement arguments often pair with the statutory carve-outs to undo a denial.
The statutes behind this
Cited by name as authority, for your own reading — informational only, not legal advice.
Tex. Prop. Code § 202.010
Voids covenants that prohibit or restrict a solar energy device, allowing only limited, defined conditions.
Tex. Prop. Code § 202.011 & § 202.007
Protect display of the U.S./Texas flags and the installation of rainwater-harvesting systems and drought-resistant landscaping against covenant prohibitions.
Tex. Prop. Code § 202.006
Requires the architectural standards (dedicatory instruments) to be recorded to be enforceable.
How to appeal an architectural denial in Texas
Use Texas's solar, flag, and landscaping carve-outs plus recorded-rule requirements to challenge an ARC denial.
Identify the recorded standard
Ask which recorded dedicatory instrument your request violated. A standard that was never recorded is generally unenforceable (Tex. Prop. Code § 202.006).
Check the carve-outs
If your project is solar, a flag display, rainwater harvesting, or drought-resistant landscaping, the HOA generally can't ban it — only impose limited, defined conditions.
Gather comparables
Photograph similar approved projects in the community to support a selective-enforcement argument (see that guide).
Submit a written appeal
Resubmit citing the statutory carve-out and the recorded-standard question, and ask the board to address it at a noticed meeting with minutes.
Keep the paper trail
Preserve submissions, denials, and reasons. The record is what powers a statutory or recorded-rule challenge.
Common questions
Can a Texas HOA ban solar panels?
Generally no. Tex. Prop. Code § 202.010 makes covenants that prohibit or restrict a solar energy device largely void; the HOA can impose only limited, defined conditions that don't substantially raise cost or reduce efficiency.
Can they stop me from flying a flag or harvesting rainwater?
No. Texas protects display of the U.S. and Texas flags within reasonable limits and the installation of rainwater-harvesting systems and drought-resistant landscaping against covenant prohibitions (Tex. Prop. Code § 202.011 / § 202.007).
What if the standard they cited was never recorded?
Architectural standards must be recorded dedicatory instruments to be enforceable (Tex. Prop. Code § 202.006). A denial based on an unrecorded standard is vulnerable.
They approved my neighbor's identical project but denied mine. Now what?
That's selective enforcement. Document the approved comparables and raise the inconsistency on appeal — it pairs well with the recorded-rule and statutory-carve-out arguments. See the selective-enforcement guide.