Meeting Minutes

Robert's Rules of Order for HOA Meetings: A Simple Guide

Doug McLain May 31, 2026 2 min read
Robert's Rules of Order for HOA Meetings: A Simple Guide

Robert's Rules of Order is the most widely used set of meeting rules in the United States, and most HOA bylaws require boards to follow it. But the full manual is over 700 pages — and your board doesn't need 700 pages. It needs about ten rules. This is the plain-English version for HOA boards.

Why HOAs use Robert's Rules

Robert's Rules exists to do one thing: let a group make fair decisions in an orderly way, where the majority rules but the minority is heard. For an HOA board, that means meetings that stay on track, decisions that are clearly recorded, and a process no owner can later call unfair.

The core sequence: how a decision actually gets made

  1. A member makes a motion — "I move that we approve the $4,000 landscaping bid from GreenScape."
  2. Another member seconds it — "Second." (No second? The motion dies.)
  3. The chair states the motion and opens discussion.
  4. The board discusses — only one person speaks at a time, through the chair.
  5. The chair calls the vote — "All in favor… opposed…"
  6. The chair announces the result — "The motion carries, 4 to 1."

That six-step loop is 90% of parliamentary procedure. Everything else is just handling special situations.

The handful of motions you'll actually use

  • Main motion — proposes an action. Needs a second, is debatable, passes by majority.
  • Motion to amend — changes the wording of a motion on the floor ("I move to amend to $3,500").
  • Motion to table — sets something aside for later.
  • Motion to call the question — ends debate and forces a vote (needs two-thirds).
  • Point of order — flags a rules violation; needs no second.
  • Motion to adjourn — ends the meeting.

The rules that keep meetings sane

  • One item at a time. Finish the motion on the floor before starting another.
  • Speak through the chair. No cross-talk or interruptions.
  • Quorum first. No quorum, no binding votes — check your bylaws for the number.
  • Majority decides, supermajority for big stuff. Routine items pass by majority; ending debate or special actions may need two-thirds.
  • The chair stays neutral during debate and votes last (or only to break a tie, per your bylaws).

Record it in the minutes

Robert's Rules and your minutes are two halves of the same job: the rules govern how a decision is made, and the minutes prove it was made correctly. For every motion, your minutes should capture the exact wording, who moved and seconded it, and the vote count. (See our guide on what to include in HOA meeting minutes.)

Run procedure on autopilot

HOA Board Minutes structures every meeting around motions and votes, so you capture them in the right format as they happen — and your minutes write themselves. Create a free account to try it.

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