Jacksonville & Northeast FL HOA paint submission packet

The complete walkthrough of every document, color sample, product spec, and prep detail your Jacksonville HOA may need before approving your exterior repaint — with a sample packet format and the most common reasons submissions get delayed.

By Thomas Drake, Founder & Owner, A New Leaf Painting Contractors  ·  25 years preparing paint specifications across Northeast Florida  ·  Updated April 2026

The Short Answer

A complete Jacksonville HOA paint submission usually includes your property address, HOA name, body color, trim color, door or accent colors, paint manufacturer, color codes, sheen, product line, LRV (when required), photos or color samples, surface preparation details, and contractor documentation. Some Jacksonville HOAs may also require an official ARB or ARC form, neighbor acknowledgement, or submission directly through the management company. Every HOA is different — always confirm final requirements with your association before submitting.

Important Note

Every HOA is different. This guide is for general homeowner education and does not replace your community’s covenants, architectural guidelines, management company instructions, or legal advice. Always confirm final requirements directly with your HOA, ARB, ARC, ACC, property manager, or association documents before painting.

Need help preparing your HOA paint details?

A New Leaf Painting helps Jacksonville homeowners organize the paint-related information commonly requested by HOAs — including color codes, product specs, sheens, LRV details, prep scope, photos, and contractor documentation.

11+components in a typical packet
25 yrsof Jacksonville HOA paint projects
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What is an HOA paint submission packet?

An HOA paint submission packet is the information your homeowners association or architectural review board uses to approve your exterior paint project before work begins. Different communities call it different things — an ARB application, an ARC submission, an architectural change request, or a design review packet — but the function is the same.

The packet typically contains:

  • The colors you want to use
  • Where each color will be applied
  • Product specifications (manufacturer, product line, sheen)
  • Photos or color samples
  • Surface preparation details
  • Contractor information
  • Any required HOA forms

The HOA reviews this information against your community’s covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs) and its current architectural guidelines. If everything matches the approved standards and the packet is complete, the application is typically approved. If anything is missing or unclear, the application is usually returned for clarification — which means waiting for the next review cycle.

Why packet completeness matters more than the color

Most homeowners assume the hardest part of an HOA paint application is picking a color the architectural review board will like. After 25 years of preparing paint specifications across Northeast Florida — Marsh Landing, Sawgrass, Eagle Harbor, Nocatee, Julington Creek, Palencia, eTown, Deerwood, Glen Kernan, and dozens of other communities — what we see most often isn’t color rejection. It’s incomplete information.

Many HOA paint applications are delayed or rejected on the first review because they are incomplete — not because the color is automatically wrong. Missing color codes, sheen details, LRV values, photos, samples, or contractor documentation can push the request into another review cycle.

This is why the difference between a 4-week and a 12-week project usually comes down to whether the homeowner — or, more often, the painting contractor working on their behalf — submitted complete information on the first try.

The economics of incomplete submissions: If your repaint is timed around a specific weather window, school break, or move-in date, an extra review cycle can push the project out by another 3 to 6 weeks. We’ve seen homeowners postpone projects entire seasons because the first ARB cycle slipped and they couldn’t re-submit fast enough to start before the next weather window. Get the packet right the first time.

The components below are what most Northeast Florida HOA architectural review boards want to see, regardless of whether you live in a sub-association of Marsh Landing, a master-planned community like Nocatee, or a historic district like San Marco or Avondale. Some communities require additional information — we’ll cover those in the community-specific variations section — but these components are the universal floor.

The components of a complete submission packet

Each component below includes what to include, why it matters, and (where helpful) an example of what the spec actually looks like.

1

The architectural change application form

Required

The current version of your community’s architectural change application — sometimes called an Architectural Review Request (ARR), Architectural Modification Request (AMR), or Design Review Application. Pull this directly from your management company’s portal or website. Don’t reuse a form you got at closing; communities update their forms periodically and submitting an outdated version may trigger a rejection.

The form should be fully completed (no blank fields), signed by the homeowner of record, and dated. If your home is owned jointly, both signatures are typically required. If your home is held in a trust or LLC, the trustee or authorized representative signs.

2

Paint manufacturer and product line

Required

Specify the manufacturer (Sherwin-Williams or Benjamin Moore) and the specific product line within that manufacturer’s catalog. “Sherwin-Williams” alone is usually not enough — Sherwin-Williams sells everything from contractor-grade SuperPaint to top-tier Emerald, and the durability difference between those products is significant.

For Northeast Florida exteriors, the product lines we typically recommend are Sherwin-Williams Duration, Sherwin-Williams Emerald, Benjamin Moore Regal Select Exterior, and Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior. Coastal communities like Marsh Landing, Sawgrass, Atlantic Beach, and Amelia Island often benefit from Emerald or Aura specifically because of their salt-air resistance — see our Ponte Vedra Beach salt air repainting guide for technical detail on why coastal exposure changes product selection.

Body coat: Sherwin-Williams Emerald Exterior Acrylic Latex
Trim coat: Sherwin-Williams Emerald Exterior Acrylic Latex
Doors/Shutters: Sherwin-Williams Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel
3

Exact color names with manufacturer codes

Required

Color names alone are usually not enough. ARBs typically want the manufacturer’s color code — the unique identifier that distinguishes “Alabaster” by Sherwin-Williams (SW 7008) from any other “Alabaster” by another manufacturer. Codes are also what let the ARB verify the color in the manufacturer’s database, confirm the LRV, and compare against the community’s approved palette.

Specify body, trim, and accent colors separately. If your home has multiple body colors (a common occurrence on stucco-and-fiber-cement combination homes), list each one with its placement.

Body (stucco): Sherwin-Williams Accessible Beige, SW 7036
Body (fiber cement): Sherwin-Williams Accessible Beige, SW 7036
Trim: Sherwin-Williams Alabaster, SW 7008
Front door: Sherwin-Williams Iron Ore, SW 7069
Shutters: Sherwin-Williams Iron Ore, SW 7069
4

Sheen specifications for each color

Required

Sheen — flat, satin, semi-gloss, or gloss — affects both how the color reads on the wall and how durable the paint film is. Many Northeast Florida HOA standards specify sheen requirements separately for body, trim, and accent. Submitting “Alabaster” without specifying flat versus satin is usually incomplete.

Common sheens for Florida exterior work: flat or low-lustre on stucco body walls (hides surface imperfections, reduces glare in strong sun), satin on fiber cement and wood siding body walls, satin or semi-gloss on trim, semi-gloss or gloss on doors and shutters.

5

Light Reflectance Value (LRV) for each color

Required when HOA asks for it

LRV is a number from 0 (pure black) to 100 (pure white) measuring how much visible light a color reflects. Many Jacksonville HOA architectural standards specify LRV requirements because Florida’s intense UV environment makes color choice a durability issue, not just an aesthetic one. Common HOA rules require body wall LRV between 55 and 80, with separate ranges for trim and accents.

Manufacturers publish LRV in their color cards and online databases. Sherwin-Williams Alabaster is LRV 82. Accessible Beige is LRV 58. Hale Navy by Benjamin Moore is LRV 6 (acceptable for shutters and doors but generally not for body walls). The LRV section of our complete pillar guide walks through why this matters in detail.

Body: Accessible Beige (SW 7036) — LRV 58
Trim: Alabaster (SW 7008) — LRV 82
Front door: Iron Ore (SW 7069) — LRV 6
6

Color placement plan

Required

A written description — and ideally a simple sketch or annotated photo — showing where each color goes on the home. Body color on stucco walls. Trim color on fascia, soffits, and window casings. Accent on shutters and front door. Garage door painted to match body. So on.

This is where many submissions fail. The homeowner lists three approved colors but doesn’t specify which goes where, and the ARB has to either guess or send the packet back for clarification. A clear placement plan eliminates that ambiguity. Some communities provide a fillable diagram template — use it. If yours doesn’t, write the placement plan in plain language as part of the application.

7

Physical color samples or painted boards

Required

Most Jacksonville HOAs require physical color samples — either manufacturer paint chips, large-format printed color cards, or actual painted sample boards (typically 12″ x 12″ or larger). Some communities require both: chips for the application packet plus painted boards mounted to the home for the on-site review.

Why physical samples matter: monitor displays and printed brochures distort color significantly. A color that looks soft warm beige on the chip can read pink-orange on a south-facing stucco wall in afternoon Florida sun. The ARB wants to see the actual pigment under actual lighting conditions, not a photograph of the pigment.

Painted sample boards are the highest standard and tend to clear faster in strict communities like Marsh Landing, The Plantation at Ponte Vedra, and Sawgrass.

8

Current property photos from all elevations

Required

Most Jacksonville HOAs require 4 to 8 current photos showing all elevations of the home being repainted — front, sides, rear, plus close-ups of any architectural features that affect color placement (gables, columns, accent walls, dormers).

Photos should be recent (within 30 days of submission), taken in good daylight, and high enough resolution that details are visible. Don’t submit photos pulled from old listings or Google Street View — ARBs notice, and old photos can trigger questions about whether the home’s condition has changed since.

9

Surface preparation scope

Required

The prep work is half the job on any exterior repaint, and HOAs know it. Submission packets that specify thorough preparation tend to clear faster than packets that gloss over prep, because volunteer ARB members have all watched neighbors hire contractors who skipped prep and produced repaints that failed visibly within 2 to 3 years.

A complete prep scope typically specifies: pressure washing pressure and detergent, drying time before priming, scope of scraping and sanding, primer specification (oil-based stain-blocker on bare wood, bonding primer on stucco, corrosion-inhibiting on metal), caulking specification, wood and stucco repair scope, masking strategy, and number of topcoat applications. For Northeast Florida exterior work, two coats of premium topcoat over properly primed substrate is the standard.

10

Contractor insurance, business, and qualification documentation

Required

Many HOAs ask for proof that the contractor is properly registered, insured, and qualified to perform the proposed scope of work. Depending on the project, this may include:

  • Certificate of general liability insurance, often with the HOA listed as additional insured
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption certificate where applicable
  • Business name, contact information, and physical address
  • License or registration information when applicable to the scope of work
  • Warranty terms (manufacturer and labor)
  • Written scope of work matching the submission

Our Iron-Clad Guarantee & Warranty page shows the documentation we provide for every HOA project.

11

Estimated project timeline

Required

An estimated start date and completion date so the ARB knows when work will be visible in the community. Some HOAs use this to coordinate with neighborhood-wide events (community garage sales, holiday decoration windows, golf tournaments at country club communities).

Don’t promise a tight timeline you can’t keep. Most exterior repaints in Northeast Florida take 5 to 10 working days for a typical single-family home, longer for two-story estates or homes requiring extensive prep. Build a 7-day weather buffer into your estimated completion date — Florida humidity and afternoon thunderstorms regularly push schedules.

Optional but recommended: A one-page contractor reference document listing 3 completed projects in your specific HOA community or a similar one, with addresses and dates. ARBs aren’t required to review references, but submitting them voluntarily signals professionalism and tends to shorten internal back-and-forth.

Free Download · Jacksonville Homeowners

Get the HOA Paint Submission Checklist

Before you submit your paint request, use our Jacksonville HOA Paint Submission Checklist to make sure you have the color codes, sheens, LRV values, photos, product specs, and contractor documents your HOA may ask for.

Sample packet format

To make this concrete, here’s what a complete submission packet looks like, formatted as a typical Northeast Florida HOA repaint. The example below is a teaching template based on common requirements, not a specific submission. Use it as a model when you build your own packet — substitute your home’s actual address, your community’s actual ARB form, and the colors and products from your own project.

Sample Format · Based on Common Northeast Florida HOA Requirements

Two-story Mediterranean stucco repaint · 4 colors

The home: roughly 4,800 sq ft Mediterranean-style stucco, two-story, with terracotta tile roof and copper accent details. Existing finish: 11-year-old paint failing on south and west elevations. Owner wants to refresh with a closer-to-original palette while addressing minor stucco crazing and full-perimeter caulking.

Section 1 — Application Form Architectural Review Request — Community ARB Form (current version)
Homeowner: [name] · Property: [address] · Lot: [number]
Submitted to: [ARB Coordinator name] via [management company portal/email]
Submission date: [date] · Next ARB meeting: [date]

Section 2 — Manufacturer & Product Body coat: Sherwin-Williams Emerald Exterior Acrylic Latex
Trim coat: Sherwin-Williams Emerald Exterior Acrylic Latex
Doors/Shutters: Sherwin-Williams Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel

Section 3 — Colors with Codes & LRV Body (stucco): Natural Linen, SW 9109 — LRV 72 · Satin sheen
Trim (fascia/soffits): Alabaster, SW 7008 — LRV 82 · Semi-gloss
Front door: Iron Ore, SW 7069 — LRV 6 · Gloss
Shutters: Iron Ore, SW 7069 — LRV 6 · Semi-gloss

Section 4 — Color Placement Plan Body color (Natural Linen) on all stucco wall surfaces — front, sides, rear elevations.
Trim color (Alabaster) on fascia, soffits, window casings, garage door surround, decorative moldings.
Garage door painted to match body (Natural Linen).
Front door (Iron Ore) — single 8′ arched mahogany door, Gloss finish.
Shutters (Iron Ore) — Semi-gloss, 4 windows on front elevation only.

Section 5 — Surface Preparation Scope Pressure wash entire exterior, 2,800 PSI with mildewcide surfactant.
48-hour drying period before any further work.
Stucco repair: elastomeric crack filling on hairline cracks (approximately 60 linear feet identified).
Caulk replacement: 100% acrylic-urethane sealant on all window/door perimeters and vertical-to-horizontal transitions.
Bare wood priming: oil-based stain-blocking primer on any exposed wood.
Stucco bonding primer on patched and bare areas.
Two-coat application of premium topcoat over properly prepared substrate.

Section 6 — Contractor Information A New Leaf Painting Contractors
Address: 11246 Distribution Ave E STE 16, Jacksonville, FL 32256
Phone: (904) 615-6599
General liability insurance: certificate attached
Workers’ compensation: certificate attached
Business registration and applicable license/registration: documentation attached

Section 7 — Project Timeline Estimated start: [date after expected ARB approval]
Estimated completion: [date — typically 10 working days, includes 7-day weather buffer]

Attachments 8 current property photos (front, both sides, rear, 4 detail shots)
Painted sample boards (12″ x 12″) for body, trim, door colors
Manufacturer color cards for all 4 colors with LRV verified
References for completed projects in similar HOA communities
Insurance certificates · Business documentation

This is what a complete packet looks like. Every component is present. Every spec is verified against the manufacturer’s published data. The sheen, LRV, and product line are all explicit. The prep scope is detailed enough that the ARB can see what’s actually going to happen. The contractor information is documented with proof. The timeline is realistic.

For more on the technical reality of estate-home repaints — including lift access, salt-air rated coatings, and fall protection — see our two-story painting in Marsh Landing guide.

Common reasons HOA paint submissions get delayed

After a quarter-century of preparing paint specifications for ARBs across Northeast Florida, we’ve seen every variety of delay. Here are the most common — and most are preventable with a complete packet.

Missing color codes

“Tan body, white trim” without manufacturer codes. The ARB can’t verify the color, can’t check the approved palette, and can’t confirm the LRV.

Color names without numbers

“Alabaster” exists at multiple manufacturers and the unmodified color name doesn’t tell the ARB which one you mean. Always pair the name with the manufacturer’s specific code.

Sheen not specified

Body, trim, and accent colors listed but no sheen for any of them. Many ARBs require sheen specified separately for each surface.

Unclear color placement

Three colors approved but no description of which goes where. The ARB has to either guess or send the packet back. Always include a written placement plan.

Missing LRV when required

Some communities require LRV for each color. Submitting without it can stall the application until the missing values are provided.

Forgotten elements

Submission lists body and trim but forgets garage door, shutters, or front door. Every visible exterior surface should be addressed.

Outside-palette without variance

Selecting a color outside the community’s approved palette without explicitly requesting a variance. Many communities maintain pre-approved lists.

Missing prep specifications

“We will paint the exterior” with no prep details. Always specify pressure washing, drying time, priming, caulking, and any wood/stucco repair.

Missing contractor documentation

Submitting without insurance certificates, business documentation, or qualification information that the HOA requires.

Old or low-quality photos

Photos pulled from MLS listings, Google Street View, or 5-year-old phone shots. ARBs want current photos in good daylight showing all elevations.

Submitted too close to project date

Submitting 2 weeks before the desired start with no buffer for a review cycle or any conditional modifications.

Sent to wrong contact

Submitting to the master HOA when the sub-association has architectural authority, or to the wrong management company for two-tier communities.

Most delays aren’t because the homeowner chose a bad color. They happen because the submission is incomplete or unclear. The pattern is consistent: incomplete information forces the ARB to make assumptions, and ARBs typically don’t make assumptions — they ask for more information, and that adds time.

Avoid delays before your project starts

Schedule an exterior painting estimate and we’ll help you organize the paint information your HOA may request — color codes, product specs, sheens, LRV details, prep scope, and contractor documentation.

What your painting contractor should provide

The HOA application is technically the homeowner’s responsibility — your name, your signature, your property. But preparing the technical content of the packet is where a knowledgeable Jacksonville painting contractor can make the process much easier on you.

A professional contractor with HOA experience should be able to clearly explain — and document — what product, sheen, color codes, prep process, and surface preparation they’re using. If your painter can’t articulate those details, your HOA submission may be harder than it needs to be, and your finished result may not last as long in Florida weather.

What the contractor should provide

  • Complete product specs — manufacturer, product line, sheen, all four+ surfaces broken out separately
  • Exact color codes verified against the manufacturer’s current published data
  • LRV information when available and when your community requires it
  • Color placement plan — written description of what goes where
  • Painted sample boards — physical 12″ x 12″ or larger boards painted with actual product, when needed
  • Detailed prep scope — pressure washing, drying time, primer specs, caulking, wood and stucco repair
  • Insurance certificates — general liability and workers’ compensation, current and dated
  • Business and qualification documentation — registration, applicable license/registration information, scope of work
  • References — completed projects in similar HOA communities
  • Realistic project timeline with weather buffer built in

What you submit

  • The completed application form (signed and dated)
  • Current property photos (taken within 30 days of submission)
  • The contractor’s spec packet attached as exhibits
  • Any community-specific supplemental forms
  • Neighbor acknowledgement, if your community requires it

When you hire A New Leaf Painting for an HOA exterior repaint, we help organize the paint-related details needed for your submission so you’re not left guessing on the technical fields. The application is still yours to sign and submit, but the spec details should not be a homework assignment for the homeowner.

What A New Leaf Painting can and cannot do

HOA paint approval is a process between the homeowner and the association. We help with the parts of that process where painting expertise matters — and we’re transparent about the parts that fall outside what any contractor can control.

We can help with

  • Paint color documentation
  • Manufacturer names and color codes
  • Product line recommendations for Florida exterior conditions
  • Sheen recommendations
  • LRV information when available
  • Prep and scope descriptions
  • Insurance and business documentation
  • Painted sample boards when needed
  • Guidance on common Jacksonville HOA submission requirements
  • Exterior painting after written approval is received

We cannot

  • Guarantee HOA approval
  • Override your HOA rules
  • Sign the homeowner application for you
  • Provide legal advice
  • Control ARB meeting schedules
  • Promise automatic approval
  • Submit as the homeowner unless your HOA permits contractor involvement
  • Speed up your management company’s review

We recommend homeowners confirm final requirements directly with their HOA, property manager, or architectural review board before submitting any application.

Before you pick a color, check these 5 things

Five quick checks before you commit to a color

These are the questions that catch homeowners off guard most often. A few minutes of confirmation up front can save weeks of resubmission later.

  1. Is the color on your HOA’s approved palette? Many Jacksonville communities maintain pre-approved color lists. Selecting outside that list is possible but typically requires a formal variance request and a longer review cycle.
  2. Does your HOA require a minimum or maximum LRV? Common Northeast Florida HOA standards specify LRV ranges for body walls (often 55–80) with separate ranges for trim and accents. Confirm your community’s actual requirement before selecting.
  3. Does the body color work with your roof? Especially important for stucco-and-tile communities like Palencia, Marsh Landing, and Sawgrass — body color must complement the existing roof color.
  4. Are neighboring homes already using similar colors? Many communities (Crosswater at Nocatee is a notable example) enforce same-color adjacency rules — your immediate neighbors and the home directly across the street typically can’t share your body color.
  5. Does your HOA restrict dark trim, black doors, or bold accents? Some communities allow what others restrict. Check before you fall in love with a deep navy front door or a black trim treatment.

For specific approved palettes by community, see our Jacksonville HOA Paint Color Guide.

Do you need HOA approval if you’re repainting the same color?

In many Jacksonville HOA communities, yes. Even if you are repainting the same color, the association may still require written approval before exterior painting begins. Some HOAs offer a simplified or expedited review for same-color repaints — but homeowners should confirm this in writing before scheduling the project.

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

The safer path is always to file a brief written request stating “repainting in [color name and code], same as existing” with current photos attached. Same-color requests typically clear faster than full applications, but the documentation is what protects you if anyone ever questions the work.

What if your HOA already sent a violation letter?

Already received a notice?

Don’t panic — but don’t ignore it either

If your HOA has sent a notice about faded paint, peeling paint, mildew, or an unapproved color, the worst thing to do is wait. Most HOAs give 30 to 60 days to come into compliance, and the fines that accrue after that window can add up quickly.

The best next step is to review the violation notice carefully, confirm exactly what the HOA is requesting, and prepare a clear repaint plan with colors, products, prep details, and timeline. If the violation requires returning to an approved color you no longer have on file, the HOA office or management company can usually provide the original approved palette or color records.

Bring Your Violation Letter to Your Estimate

We’ve handled HOA paint violation responses across Northeast Florida — from minor “needs touch-up” notices to forced full repaints after unapproved color jobs. The faster you get a complete packet in front of the ARB, the faster the violation closes.

Community-specific variations across Jacksonville

The 11 components above are the universal floor across most of Northeast Florida. Some communities require additional documentation or modify the standard process in ways worth knowing about before you submit.

Marsh Landing & Sawgrass

Painted boards required, not chips

Marsh Landing Country Club and Sawgrass Players Club typically require physical painted sample boards (12″ x 12″ or larger) rather than manufacturer paint chips. The ARB reviews the boards in actual sunlight against the home itself before approving.

Eagle Harbor sub-HOAs

Submit to your sub-HOA, not master

Eagle Harbor has multiple sub-associations including Stone Creek (managed separately by RealManage). Identify which sub-HOA your home belongs to and submit there. Master submissions get bounced back.

Nocatee communities

Online portal preferred

Most Nocatee sub-HOAs (Crosswater, Twenty Mile, Cypress Trails) use an online submission portal that’s faster than paper. Color binders are available at the management office for in-person reference. Adjacent-home color matching rule is enforced.

Julington Creek Plantation

47+ sub-neighborhoods, each with supplements

Pull your specific neighborhood’s supplemental covenants in addition to the master CDD documents. Hardie Board fiber cement homes have specific primer requirements — see our Hardie Board repainting guide.

Palencia

Stucco color must complement tile roof

Palencia’s Spanish/Mediterranean architecture means body color is reviewed against the existing terracotta tile roof. Trim is typically restricted to white and warm off-whites.

San Marco & Avondale

Certificate of Appropriateness, not ARB

Historic districts require a COA application reviewed by the Historic District Council (San Marco) or Riverside Avondale Preservation (Avondale). Period-appropriate palettes are typically required. See our San Marco historic refinishing guide for context.

eTown

etownjax.com portal submission

eTown uses The PARC Group’s online portal at etownjax.com. Submission is digital from start to finish. Tech-modern palette is broadly approved — more flexibility on contemporary grays and matte black accents than older communities tend to allow.

Queens Harbour

Canal-view spec coordination

Queens Harbour Yacht & Country Club enforces visual coordination with neighboring estates, especially for canal-view properties. Color samples must be physical. Allow extra time during peak summer ARB load.

For complete management contacts, ARB submission methods, and meeting schedules across nearly 100 Northeast Florida communities, see our Jacksonville HOA Master Directory.

When should you submit your HOA paint request?

Most HOA paint approvals are not instant. Some communities review applications weekly, while others review them monthly or only at scheduled ARB meetings. To avoid delaying your painting project, submit your paint request before choosing a firm project start date.

Best practices

  • Submit early. Plan to submit 4 to 8 weeks before your preferred project start date.
  • Don’t schedule the crew until approval is confirmed in writing. Verbal approval doesn’t count.
  • Keep written approval on file. Save the email or letter with your closing documents.
  • Confirm whether approval expires after a certain number of days — some communities require work to begin within 60 or 90 days of approval.

The fastest path through the timeline

  • Week -8: Schedule contractor estimates. Pick your contractor. Confirm community palette and pull current architectural standards.
  • Week -7: Lock paint colors with contractor. Order painted sample boards if needed. Confirm contractor documentation is current.
  • Week -6: Take current property photos. Receive complete spec packet from contractor. Review for completeness against the components checklist above.
  • Week -5: Complete and sign application form. Attach all packet components. Submit to management company at least 7 to 14 days before next ARB meeting.
  • Week -4 to -2: ARB review cycle. Most Jacksonville communities turn complete packets around in this window.
  • Week -1: Receive written approval. Confirm scope matches contractor’s planned work exactly.
  • Week 0: Project starts.

If your packet bounces back as incomplete on the first cycle, add 3 to 6 weeks to this timeline. If you’re trying to start a project in October, that means you need to begin the packet assembly process in early August. If you wait until late September to start, you’re scheduling around Thanksgiving travel and the holiday season.

Florida-specific timing note: The strongest exterior painting window in Northeast Florida runs October through May — lower humidity, cooler temperatures, fewer afternoon thunderstorms, and ARB calendars less congested than peak summer. If you want a fall start, submit your packet by mid-August. If you want a spring start, submit by mid-January.

If you are trying to paint before a move-in, a sale, an inspection, or a specific weather window, contact us early so we can help prepare your paint details before your HOA deadline.

Frequently asked questions about HOA paint submission packets

Do I need HOA approval before painting my house?

Most Jacksonville HOA communities require written approval before exterior painting begins. The covenants typically require approval for any exterior modification visible from the street, and a fresh coat of paint qualifies — even repainting in the same color often requires at least a brief written request.

Always confirm with your management company before scheduling work. Skipping the approval step can result in violation notices, fines, and forced repaints.

What happens if I paint without HOA approval?

You may be required to repaint, pay fines, or submit a retroactive application. Most Jacksonville HOAs give 30 to 60 days to come into compliance once a violation is issued. If fines aren’t paid, the HOA may pursue further enforcement, which can include placing a lien on the home.

The total cost of skipping approval almost always exceeds the cost of doing it right the first time. If you’ve already received a violation letter, see our violation letter section above for next steps.

Can my painter submit the HOA application for me?

Some HOAs allow contractor involvement, while others require the homeowner to submit the application directly. The application is technically the homeowner’s legal responsibility — your name, your signature, your property — but contractors can typically prepare and attach the technical content.

A New Leaf Painting can help provide the paint-related details needed for your application — color codes, product specs, sheen, LRV, prep scope, contractor documentation. The homeowner of record signs and submits.

What paint details does my HOA need?

Most HOAs want color names with manufacturer codes, the manufacturer and product line, sheen for each surface, and where each color will be applied (body, trim, fascia, soffits, garage door, doors, shutters). Many also require LRV, current property photos, surface preparation details, and contractor documentation.

The full component list is in the components section above.

Should I wait for HOA approval before scheduling painting?

Yes. It is best to have written approval before scheduling exterior painting. Verbal approval doesn’t count, and starting work without written approval can trigger a violation even if the colors are within the approved palette.

Build the ARB review window into your project timeline. Plan for 30 to 45 days end-to-end for most Jacksonville communities, and don’t lock in crew dates until the approval letter is in hand.

How long does it take to assemble a complete submission packet?

If your contractor provides a complete spec packet upfront, assembling the application takes 1 to 2 hours. You complete and sign the application form, take current property photos (or use ones the contractor took during the estimate), attach the contractor’s spec packet, and either drop it off or upload it through the management portal.

If your contractor doesn’t provide the spec packet and you have to assemble the technical content yourself, plan for 4 to 8 hours of work plus calls to the manufacturer to verify codes and LRV.

Does A New Leaf Painting guarantee HOA approval?

No painting contractor can guarantee HOA approval. We can help prepare clear paint documentation, organize the technical specifications your application typically needs, and guide you through common submission requirements. Final approval is at the discretion of your community’s architectural review board.

What we can promise is that you won’t be left guessing on the spec details. The application is yours to sign and submit; the technical content shouldn’t be a homework assignment.

What if my HOA doesn’t respond within the stated review period?

Florida HOA architectural review timelines depend on the statute, your association’s governing documents, and how your application was submitted. Florida Statute 720.3035 governs HOA architectural review, and 2024 amendments updated standards for transparency and timeliness.

If your HOA does not respond within the stated review period, do not assume you are approved without written confirmation. Request written status from the management company and consult your governing documents — or a qualified attorney — before assuming any default approval.

How long is HOA approval valid before I have to start work?

This varies by community. Some Jacksonville HOAs require work to begin within 60 to 90 days of approval, others within 6 months, and a few don’t have a strict expiration on approval. Always check your specific approval letter for any time limits.

If your project gets delayed past the approval window — for weather, scheduling, or financial reasons — most communities will renew the approval with a brief written request. Don’t assume an old approval is still valid.

Why Jacksonville homeowners trust A New Leaf Painting for HOA exterior repaints

  • We understand Northeast Florida exterior surfaces — stucco, Hardie board, wood siding, trim, doors, and coastal homes
  • We provide clear paint specifications, not vague “we’ll paint it beige” estimates
  • We document prep work because Florida humidity, UV, rain, and salt air punish shortcuts
  • We carry professional insurance documentation and provide it in writing
  • 750+ verified 5-star reviews across multiple independent platforms
  • 25 years serving Jacksonville homeowners
  • Florida exterior paint systems built for UV, rain, humidity, and salt air
  • Clean, professional crews with documented project standards

Continue reading: detailed guides for Jacksonville HOA painting

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