Updated 2026  ·  Verified Current

The Jacksonville HOA
Exterior Paint Color Guide

Approved palettes, submission timelines, and management contacts for 20 of Northeast Florida’s most established communities — built from 25 years of HOA submissions, not guesswork.

20+ Communities 4 Counties Verified April 2026
Why this guide exists

Painting your house in Jacksonville without HOA approval is a $15,000 mistake

In 25 years of painting homes across Northeast Florida, we’ve watched it happen more than once. A homeowner picks a color they love, hires a painter, the job looks beautiful — and three weeks later a violation letter arrives in the mail. The HOA orders the home repainted at the homeowner’s expense, sometimes with daily fines accruing until it’s done.

Almost every gated and master-planned community in Jacksonville requires written architectural approval before you can change your exterior paint color. Many require it even if you’re repainting the same color, because the existing color may have faded enough that the new paint won’t match what’s on file. The submission process isn’t optional, and “I didn’t know” is not an accepted defense.

What we’ve actually seen

A Marsh Landing homeowner painted their stucco a soft sage green in 2023 without submitting to the ARB. The HOA cited them, demanded repainting in an approved neutral within 60 days, and the homeowner paid for the job twice — about $11,000 total — because the original painter wasn’t licensed and walked away from the do-over. The lesson isn’t “HOAs are strict.” The lesson is: verify approval before the first gallon is opened.

This guide gives you what you need before you pick a color: who manages the architectural review for 20 of Jacksonville’s largest communities, how their submission processes actually work, and which colors consistently get approved across Northeast Florida HOAs. Bookmark it. Send it to your neighbors. We update it twice a year because management companies change.

Every HOA submission, in five steps

The Jacksonville HOA submission framework

Every HOA in this guide has its own forms and timeline, but the underlying process is the same across every Northeast Florida community we’ve worked in. Follow these five steps and your approval rate goes up dramatically.

01

Pull your covenants

Find your specific subassociation’s CC&Rs and ARB guidelines. Master association rules are not the same as your sub-HOA’s. Look for the approved color palette — many communities maintain a binder.

02

Get the application form

Most HOAs use an Architectural Review Board (ARB) or Architectural Control Committee (ACC) form. Download from the community website or request from the management company.

03

Submit color samples

Physical paint chips, manufacturer name, color number, and LRV (Light Reflectance Value). Body, trim, accent, and front door colors should each be specified separately.

04

Plan for the timeline

Most ARBs review submissions every 2–4 weeks. Build 30–45 days into your project plan. Some communities (Marsh Landing, Sawgrass) meet on fixed schedules — miss the deadline and you wait two more weeks.

05

Get written approval

Verbal approval doesn’t count. Get it in writing, save the email, and keep the approval letter with your closing documents. If you ever sell, the next owner will need it.

Painter’s note

If your painter isn’t asking about HOA approval before quoting, that’s a red flag. Any contractor who has worked in Jacksonville for more than a few years has navigated dozens of these submissions and should be familiar with the process for your specific community. We handle the ARB submission paperwork for every client at no extra charge — it’s faster than explaining the process from scratch.

20+ Communities, organized by region

Jacksonville HOAs by region: contacts, palettes, and timelines

The communities below are organized geographically. Each card lists the management company, ARB contact, typical approved palette direction, and a field-tested note from our submission experience. Phone numbers and websites change — verify before submitting.

St. Johns County · 32082, 32081, 32250, 32266

Ponte Vedra Beach & The Beaches

Marsh Landing
at Sawgrass
32082

Mediterranean, traditional, and coastal estate homes — mostly stucco. Strict architectural standards.

Typical approved palette
Manager: Marsh Landing Management Co.
Phone: (904) 273-3033
ARB Coord.: Nancy Burns
Email: nburns@marshlanding.org
Website: marshlandinghoa.com
Field note 10 sub-associations, each with its own ARB requirements. The “Green Book” architectural guidelines are mandatory reading. Allow 4–6 weeks for full approval. They will reject anything outside the natural earth-tone palette.
Sawgrass
Players Club
32082

~1,900 units across 30+ neighborhoods. Mediterranean, traditional, contemporary — varies by sub-HOA.

Typical approved palette
Manager: Marsh Landing Management Co.
Phone: (904) 273-3033
ARC meets: 2nd & 4th Mondays
Website: sawgrassplayersclub.org
Field note ARC application required before any work starts — including pressure washing. Application fees apply. Sub-associations may have additional palette restrictions on top of master rules.
Sawgrass
Country Club
32082

1,409 homes east of A1A through to the Atlantic. Older estate inventory — stucco, wood, mixed.

Typical approved palette
Type: Master + sub-association
ARB approval: Required for all exterior changes
Sub-HOAs: Lighthouse Bend, The Preserve, Old Barn Island, Long Cove, Preston Trail, more
Field note Each sub-HOA enforces its own palette. Beachfront properties have salt-air durability requirements that effectively rule out lower-quality paints. Plan on premium product spec.
The Plantation
at Ponte Vedra Beach
32082

Bundled equity-membership community. Estate homes, mostly stucco and Mediterranean architecture.

Typical approved palette
Type: Private gated, equity membership
Architectural review: Required
Website: theplantationpv.com (member portal)
Field note Some of the strictest design standards in Northeast Florida. ARB submissions reviewed by community architect. Color samples must be provided as actual painted boards, not chips.
Atlantic Beach
(varies by HOA)
32233

Mix of older beach cottages, mid-century homes, and newer construction. HOA varies by neighborhood.

Typical approved palette
City: City of Atlantic Beach
City phone: (904) 247-5800
HOAs: Selva Marina, Selva Lakes, Selva Linkside, others
Field note Most properties governed by individual HOAs rather than a master association. Selva Marina enforces strict coastal palette. Beachfront properties have city-level historic district considerations.
St. Johns County · 32081 · ~14,000 homes

Nocatee Communities

Crosswater Village
at Nocatee
32081

Includes Freedom Landing, Heritage Trace, Liberty Cove. Coastal cottage and Florida vernacular architecture.

Typical approved palette
Manager: BCM Services
Phone: (904) 242-0666
Email: arc@bcmservices.net
Address: 920 3rd St, Suite B, Neptune Beach
Field note Adjacent homes cannot share the same body color — the ARB checks. Builder color schemes (AV, Lennar, Mattamy) are pre-approved if you stay within them. Stepping outside requires the full submission process.
Twenty Mile
at Nocatee
32081

Includes Twenty Mile Central, Twenty Mile West, Twenty Mile Pointe, Twenty Mile Village. Coastal Florida architecture.

Typical approved palette
Manager: BCM Services
Phone: (904) 242-0666
Email: info@bcmservices.net
ARB Manual: Available on each sub-HOA website
Field note Online submission portal available for most Nocatee sub-HOAs — faster than paper. Tree removal protections in addition to color rules. Roof color changes require ARB approval too.
Cypress Trails
at Nocatee
32081

Family-oriented community within Nocatee. Mix of builder homes, coastal vernacular.

Typical approved palette
Manager: BCM Services
Phone: (904) 242-0666
Email: arc@bcmservices.net
Color rule: No matching adjacent neighbors
Field note Approved color binder available at the management office. Bring physical paint chips, not just color names. They check against the binder during the ARB meeting.
Del Webb
Ponte Vedra (Nocatee)
32081

55+ active adult community within Nocatee. Single-story coastal homes, well-maintained palette.

Typical approved palette
Manager: Self-managed with property mgmt
Website: dwnocatee.com
ARB: Resident-driven committee
Field note Community is well-maintained because residents care about it. ARB submissions move faster here than in builder-controlled neighborhoods, but the standards are equally strict.
St. Johns County · 32259, 32092, 32095

St. Johns County & Julington Creek

Julington Creek
Plantation
32259

5,800+ homes across 47 neighborhoods. Traditional Florida architecture, mature tree canopy. Strict tree protection.

Typical approved palette
Manager: Vesta Property Services
Phone: (904) 417-7600
Address: 950 Davis Pond Blvd
ARC Email: via Vesta portal
Field note Each of the 47 sub-neighborhoods has its own supplemental covenants. Pull your neighborhood’s documents, not just the master POA’s. The ARC committee meets regularly — submissions over 30 days typically clear.
Palencia
32095

Spanish/Mediterranean architecture. Stucco-dominant, tile roofs, terra cotta accents. Coordinated streetscape.

Typical approved palette
Type: Master-planned + sub-HOAs
Architectural review: Required for all exterior
Style mandate: Spanish Colonial / Mediterranean
Field note Strict visual coordination. Stucco color must complement tile roof. Trim colors restricted to white and warm off-whites. Wrought iron and dark accents typically approved on shutters and doors.
World Golf Village
(Aberdeen, Bartram, more)
32092

Multiple master-planned communities. Traditional Florida, transitional, and contemporary architecture across sub-HOAs.

Typical approved palette
Type: Multiple HOAs by community
Common managers: Vesta, May Management
ARB: Submission required per community
Field note “World Golf Village” is a region, not a single HOA. Identify your specific community (Aberdeen, Bartram Trail, Murabella, Heritage Landing) and pull its documents. Master rules and sub-HOA rules both apply.
RiverTown
32259

Riverfront master-planned community. Mix of coastal cottage, traditional, transitional architecture.

Typical approved palette
Type: Master-planned + sub-HOAs
Sub-communities: RiverTown Manor, Arbors, more
ARB approval: Required
Field note Newer community — many homes still on builder palettes. Stepping outside the original builder spec requires more documentation than staying within it. Coastal blue accents typically approved on shutters and doors.
Clay County · 32003, 32043, 32065, 32068, 32073

Fleming Island, Orange Park & Clay County

Eagle Harbor
32003

Master-planned community with golf course. 3 master HOAs + 5 sub-associations. Traditional Florida architecture.

Typical approved palette
Manager: Paraclete Services, LLC
Phone: (904) 278-0616
Contact: Theresa Barengo, CAM, AMS
Email: tlbarengo@paracleteservicesllc.com
Office: 1880 Eagle Harbor Pkwy
Field note ARC meets monthly — check the schedule on the community site. Sub-HOAs include Black Creek, Pine Lake Townhomes, Stone Creek, The Enclave, Cobblestone. Each has supplemental rules on top of the master.
Stone Creek
at Eagle Harbor
32003

Sub-association within Eagle Harbor. Single-family homes, traditional Florida architecture.

Typical approved palette
Manager: RealManage
Phone: (866) 473-2573
Address: 10199 Southside Blvd Ste 106
Email: STCREEK@ciramail.com
Field note Different management company than the rest of Eagle Harbor — submit to RealManage, not Paraclete. Virtual board meetings now standard. Check the resident portal for current ARB form.
Fleming Island
Plantation
32003

Master-planned with golf course. Multiple sub-HOAs across single-family, patio homes, condos.

Typical approved palette
Type: Master + sub-associations
Common managers: May Management, Vesta
ARB approval: Required
Field note Sub-HOAs vary widely. The earliest neighborhoods have the most lived-in palettes; newer sections have more variation in approved colors. Confirm your sub-HOA’s specific manager.
OakLeaf
Plantation
32065

Large master-planned community with multiple villages. Mix of traditional and transitional architecture.

Typical approved palette
Type: Master-planned + village HOAs
ARB approval: Required for all exterior
Sub-villages: Numerous; each with its own rules
Field note Builder palettes carry forward as approved — staying in your builder’s original 3-color scheme is the path of least resistance. Stepping outside requires color samples and the full ARC review.
Duval County · Jacksonville, FL

Duval & Jacksonville Communities

Queens Harbour
Yacht & Country Club
32225

Private gated, equity-membership country club community. Estate homes — mostly stucco, traditional and Mediterranean.

Typical approved palette
Type: Private gated, equity club
Architectural review: Required
Submission: Through community office
Field note Strict architectural standards aligned with the country club aesthetic. Color samples must be physical. Allow extra time for review during peak summer months when the ARB meets less frequently.
Glen Kernan Golf
& Country Club
32224

Private gated golf community. Estate homes, mostly Mediterranean, traditional, and transitional architecture.

Typical approved palette
Type: Private gated, country club
Architectural review: Required
Style emphasis: Mediterranean / traditional estate
Field note ARB enforces visual harmony with neighboring estates. Stucco color, trim, accent, and roof tile color all reviewed together. Plan for a 30–45 day approval cycle on color changes.
Deerwood
32256

Long-established estate community. Mature tree canopy, mix of traditional, contemporary, Mediterranean architecture.

Typical approved palette
Type: Master + sub-associations
ARB approval: Required
Note: Multiple sub-HOAs — identify yours
Field note One of Jacksonville’s oldest established premium communities. Tree protection rules are strict in addition to color rules. Established palette tends toward warm earth tones to harmonize with mature oaks.
Pablo Creek
Reserve
32224

Gated luxury community. Custom estate homes, contemporary and traditional architecture.

Typical approved palette
Type: Private gated, custom estates
Architectural review: Required
Submission: Through HOA management
Field note More architectural variety than typical — ARB approves contemporary palettes that strict traditional communities reject. Modern darker colors with warm undertones get approved here when they wouldn’t elsewhere.
Hidden Hills
Country Club
32225

Established gated golf community. Mix of traditional and contemporary architecture, mature landscaping.

Typical approved palette
Type: Gated country club community
Architectural review: Required
Common manager: Verify with HOA office
Field note More flexible on contemporary palettes than the older country clubs but still requires written ARB approval before any work. Salt-air resilience matters — spec premium product on coastal-facing exposure.
Important: Management companies, phone numbers, and ARB processes change. The information above was verified in April 2026 from public HOA websites and management company records. Before submitting any application, call the management company to confirm the current process, current contact, current fees, and current approved color palette for your specific subassociation. Approved palette swatches shown are illustrative directional ranges based on typical Northeast Florida HOA approvals — your community’s specific approved colors will be in its CC&Rs and ARB binder.
25 years of approved submissions

Colors that consistently get approved across Jacksonville HOAs

These specific Sherwin-Williams and Benjamin Moore colors clear ARB review in the vast majority of Northeast Florida communities we’ve worked in. They’re not guarantees — every HOA has its own rules — but if you’re picking a starting point, start here.

Alabaster
SW 7008
LRV 82
Accessible Beige
SW 7036
LRV 58
Agreeable Gray
SW 7029
LRV 60
Balanced Beige
SW 7037
LRV 47
Revere Pewter
BM HC-172
LRV 55
Edgecomb Gray
BM HC-173
LRV 63
Manchester Tan
BM HC-81
LRV 64
Natural Linen
SW 9109
LRV 72
Soft Chamois
BM OC-13
LRV 51
White Dove
BM OC-17
LRV 85
Creamy
SW 7012
LRV 81
Dorian Gray
SW 7017
LRV 39

All twelve are available in Sherwin-Williams Emerald Exterior, Duration Exterior, or Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior — the three premium products we specify on every Northeast Florida exterior project.

Your community isn’t on this list?

We focused this guide on the 20 communities we work in most often. There are dozens more in Northeast Florida. If yours isn’t here, the playbook is simple:

  1. Search “[Your Community Name] HOA Jacksonville” — the management company website is usually in the top three results.
  2. Look at your annual dues bill. The management company’s name, phone, and address are printed on it.
  3. Check your closing documents. Your CC&Rs and Architectural Review guidelines are part of what you signed at closing — pull them from the closing folder.
  4. Ask a long-tenured neighbor. Someone on your street has done a renovation, knows the ARB chair, and can shortcut you to the right submission form.
  5. Or call us at (904) 615-6599. After 25 years and 5,000+ homes, we’ve handled submissions for most of them.
Frequently asked

Jacksonville HOA paint questions, answered honestly

Do I really need HOA approval if I’m painting the exact same color?

In most Jacksonville HOAs, yes — technically. The covenants typically require approval for “any exterior modification visible from the street,” and a fresh coat of paint qualifies. In practice, a one-line written request that says “repainting in [color name and code], same as existing” is usually approved within a week with no fuss.

The risk of skipping the request: if the existing paint has faded over 7–10 years, the new fresh coat won’t match what the ARB has on file — which can trigger a violation even though you used the “same” color.

How long does HOA color approval actually take in Jacksonville?

Plan for 30 to 45 days, end-to-end. Some communities are faster — well-run sub-HOAs with active ARB committees can turn around an approval in two weeks. Others (Marsh Landing, The Plantation, Sawgrass) review on fixed schedules and you may wait up to six weeks if you miss a meeting deadline.

The single biggest delay is incomplete submissions. Submit the form, the physical color samples, the manufacturer information, and the LRV all at once. A second-round request slows everything by another 14–30 days.

Can my HOA reject a color even if it’s on the approved list?

Sometimes, yes. Many HOAs maintain an approved list plus a rule against same-color adjacency — meaning if your immediate neighbor or the home directly across the street already uses that color, you can be denied even though the color itself is on the list. Crosswater at Nocatee enforces this explicitly.

Submit a backup choice with your application. It saves a full review cycle if your first choice gets rejected for adjacency reasons.

What happens if I paint without approval?

You receive a violation letter. Most HOAs give 30–60 days to come into compliance, which means submitting an after-the-fact application or repainting in an approved color. If you don’t respond, fines start accruing — typically $25 to $100 per day, depending on the community.

If fines aren’t paid, the HOA can place a lien on your home. We’ve seen liens prevent home sales until the violation is cured. The total cost of “skipping” approval almost always exceeds the cost of doing it right the first time.

Are dark colors banned in most Jacksonville HOAs?

“Banned” is too strong. “Heavily restricted” is closer. Most Jacksonville HOAs allow dark accent colors on shutters, doors, and trim — black, deep navy, charcoal, espresso. What’s typically restricted is using dark colors on the main body of the home.

Beyond HOA rules, there’s a Florida-climate reason to be cautious with dark body colors: a south-facing dark stucco wall can hit 150°F+ in July sun, which accelerates paint failure significantly. Most premium exterior paints — Sherwin-Williams Emerald, Benjamin Moore Aura — are formulated for darker colors, but the HOA rule and the climate reality both push the same direction.

Does a painter handle the HOA submission, or do I have to do it?

Officially, the homeowner is responsible — the HOA has no contractual relationship with your painter. But most experienced Jacksonville painting contractors will help with the paperwork, since the painter has the product specs, color codes, LRV data, and prep details that the application requires.

At A New Leaf, we prepare and submit the ARB application for every client at no extra charge. We’ve handled hundreds of these submissions across Jacksonville’s gated communities — we know which forms each HOA uses, which committees meet on which schedule, and what gets rejected for what reasons.

How do I know what my HOA’s approved colors actually look like in real Jacksonville sun?

Color chips are tiny squares lit by office fluorescents. They will not look the same on your home in 2 PM Florida sunlight. Always paint a 24″ x 24″ sample directly on the wall — or a large sample board mounted to the wall — and view it at 9 AM, noon, and 5 PM, on multiple sides of the house.

Most ARBs require a sample-on-wall step before final approval. That requirement is for your benefit. A color that looks soft warm beige on the chip can read pink-orange on a south-facing stucco wall in July afternoon sun.

If I sell my home, does the new buyer need a copy of my ARB approval?

Keep every piece of correspondence. When you sell, the buyer’s lender and title company will request HOA estoppel letters confirming the home is in compliance. If the title search reveals any unresolved exterior modification — including paint — closing can be delayed until it’s documented or cured.

File your ARB approval letter with the rest of your home documents. It’s a small piece of paper that prevents major closing-day headaches years later.

Painting in an HOA community? We’ve been there.

After 25 years and 5,000+ homes painted across Northeast Florida — most of them in HOA communities — we know what your ARB looks for, which colors clear review without revisions, and how to spec a project so your application gets approved the first time. We won’t fill out your forms, but we’ll make sure your color choice, product spec, and prep details are documented exactly the way your HOA wants to see them.