Meeting Minutes

HOA Executive Session Minutes: What Boards Can (and Can't) Keep Private

Doug McLain May 31, 2026 2 min read
HOA Executive Session Minutes: What Boards Can (and Can't) Keep Private

Executive session is the one part of an HOA meeting that happens behind closed doors — and it's where boards most often get into legal trouble. Used correctly, it protects the association and individual owners. Used loosely, it becomes a "secret meeting" that violates open-meeting law. Here's how to draw the line and keep executive session minutes the right way.

What an executive session is

An executive session is a closed portion of a board meeting that owners may not attend. It exists for a narrow set of sensitive topics — not for ordinary board business, and never as a way to make routine decisions out of public view.

What boards CAN discuss in executive session

Most state HOA statutes limit closed sessions to a short list, typically:

  • Pending or threatened litigation and conversations with legal counsel
  • Contract negotiations still in progress
  • Personnel matters (employees of the association)
  • Owner delinquencies and payment-plan discussions
  • Disciplinary hearings / rule violations involving a specific owner

What boards CANNOT do in executive session

  • Make or finalize binding decisions that belong in open session (e.g. approving the budget, awarding a major contract). The vote generally must happen in open session.
  • Use it to avoid owner scrutiny on ordinary business.
  • Discuss topics outside the statutory list.

Check your specific state statute and your bylaws — the permitted topics and the notice/voting rules vary by state.

How to keep executive session minutes

  • Keep them separate from the regular minutes, in their own confidential record.
  • Record the essentials only — date, attendance, the general subject ("discussed pending litigation"), and any direction given — without the confidential detail that would defeat the purpose.
  • Note the entry and exit — your regular minutes should state that the board entered executive session at a time, the general reason, and the time it returned to open session.
  • Record final votes in open session. If the board reaches a decision, take the actual vote after returning to open session so it appears in the regular minutes.
  • Restrict access — executive session minutes are confidential and generally not part of the records owners can freely inspect.

The simplest rule of thumb

If a topic involves a specific owner's private situation, the association's legal exposure, or a contract still being negotiated, it likely belongs in executive session. Everything else belongs in the open meeting — and in your regular minutes.

Keep both records straight

HOA Board Minutes lets you capture open-session and executive-session items in the right place, so your confidential record stays separate from the minutes you share with owners. Create a free account to try it.

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