When I bought 200 acres of Nebraska farmland for $2,000 at a government auction, I thought I’d scored the opportunity of a lifetime. Wide open prairie. Black soil. No structures. No roads. Just freedom. Two days later, a woman in designer heels marched across the dirt and handed me a binder thick enough to stop a bullet. According to her, I owed $15,000 in back dues to a homeowners association I had never heard of — plus $750 a month going forward.
I looked around. Grass. Wind. Cows. No subdivision. No street signs. No gates. Just open agricultural land that had been farmed since the 1960s. She introduced herself as the president of a nearby HOA tied to a small cluster of upscale homes down the road. She claimed the previous owner had “agreed” to join their association — and that those obligations transferred to me. Her confidence suggested she’d done this before.
The problem? Real HOAs don’t exist by verbal claims or fancy binders. They exist through recorded covenants, conditions, and restrictions filed with the county. If land is legally part of an HOA, it’s documented. Liens, dues, enforcement powers — all of it must be recorded and tied to the parcel. So the next morning, I went straight to the county courthouse and pulled the official records for my property.
There was nothing. No covenants. No HOA filings. No amendments. No annexation documents. My parcel was classified strictly as agricultural land. It had never been incorporated into any residential association. The so-called “emails” she showed me didn’t match any recorded filings. And without recorded covenants attached to the deed, there was no legal basis for dues, violations, or liens.
That’s when I realized something important: intimidation works — until it doesn’t. If someone claims you owe money tied to property, the proof must exist in public record. Without it, there is no enforceable HOA authority. And in my case, the prairie wasn’t under anyone’s “standards” but my own.