New York HOA law: the basics
HOAs in New York are governed by New York Condominium Act (Real Property Law Article 9-B) and Planned Community Law, along with the HOA's own CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions & Restrictions), bylaws, and adopted rules. Critically, the HOA's governing documents cannot override New York state law — when the two conflict, state law wins.
This matters because many HOA boards act as if their CC&Rs give them more authority than the law actually allows. A well-cited letter pointing to the relevant section of New York Condominium Act (Real Property Law Article 9-B) and Planned Community Law can shift the dynamic immediately. Counter Gameplan turns that into a ready-to-send letter in about 60 seconds.