The Rise of HOA E-Voting: What It Means for Colorado Communities

Elections are central to how communities make decisions. Today, boards face growing expectations to run elections that are easy for owners to participate in, transparent, and fair. In Colorado, that pressure is changing how associations approach annual meetings and owner votes.

As owners become more mobile, and as virtual and hybrid meetings have become common, electronic voting has emerged as a practical way to modernize elections without changing the rules that govern them. Our partners at CondoVoter, which provides modern voting and meeting solutions for condo and HOA communities, have provided the following article exploring the rise in e-voting and what it could mean for your community.

What Is HOA E-Voting?

E-voting allows owners to cast their ballots electronically using a secure online platform. These systems are built specifically for association elections and are designed to follow the same safeguards as paper ballots.

Importantly, e-voting is not informal online polling or casual email voting. Modern platforms use secure access, voter verification, and audit trails to protect election integrity.

For many Colorado associations, e-voting offers clear benefits:

  • Higher participation — owners can vote from anywhere
  • Less administrative work — no manual ballot tracking or tallying
  • Clear records — reports and audit logs are available if questions arise
  • Lower costs — less printing and mailing.

What the Law Says in Colorado

Electronic voting rules vary by state. Some states, such as Florida and California, have adopted detailed statutes that specifically authorize electronic voting for community associations.

Colorado takes a more flexible approach.

Under the Colorado Common Interest Ownership Act (CCIOA), secret ballots are required for certain elections and owner votes. However, the law does not require ballots to be paper, only that secrecy is preserved.

In practical terms, this means electronic voting is allowed in Colorado when:

  • Ballot secrecy is maintained
  • Duplicate voting is prevented
  • Election procedures follow the association’s governing documents

Boards should always confirm requirements with legal counsel, especially if documents are older or silent on electronic voting.

Using E-Voting Responsibly

Successful e-voting is less about technology and more about process. Best practices include:

  • Confirming alignment with state law and governing documents
  • Using systems that protect ballot secrecy
  • Clearly explaining the process to owners
  • Keeping accurate records and reports

When done correctly, e-voting can reduce reliance on proxies and make reaching quorum more predictable.

Choosing the Right Platform

Not all voting tools are designed for community associations. Boards should look for platforms that:

  • Support secret ballots
  • Allow hybrid voting (electronic and paper)
  • Track participation and quorum
  • Provide clear, audit-ready reports
  • Are easy for owners to use

How Clear View HOA Financial Supports Colorado Boards

Through our partnership with CondoVoter, Clear View HOA Financial helps Colorado associations coordinate annual meetings and electronic voting from start to finish.

Our approach supports compliance, simplifies administration, and helps boards focus on leadership, not logistics.

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