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By Nashville Indiana Title Company
HOA Covenants and Your Brown County Cabin That cabin tucked into the woods near Bean Blossom or perched on a ridge overlooking the rolling hills might c...
That cabin tucked into the woods near Bean Blossom or perched on a ridge overlooking the rolling hills might come with neighbors who have opinions about your fence height.
Not all Brown County properties have HOA covenants—many don't—but when a cabin or wooded retreat sits within a planned development or subdivision, you'll find recorded restrictions that travel with the land. These aren't suggestions. They're binding agreements that affect what you can build, how you can use your property, and sometimes even what color you can paint your front door.
Covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs) are promises written into a property's deed. When a developer creates a subdivision, they often record these restrictions to maintain a certain character for the neighborhood. Every owner who buys within that subdivision agrees to follow them.
In Brown County, you'll find covenants on properties ranging from newer cabin developments near the state park to established wooded communities scattered throughout the county. The restrictions vary wildly. Some developments keep rules minimal—maybe just a requirement that structures meet certain square footage minimums. Others spell out everything from exterior lighting to the types of trees you can remove.
The important thing to understand: covenants run with the land. Whoever owns the property must follow them, whether they knew about them or not when they purchased.
Brown County cabin developments often include covenants that reflect the area's character. You might encounter restrictions about:
Structure requirements — Minimum square footage for the main dwelling, rules about outbuildings, or requirements that homes maintain a "rustic" or "natural" aesthetic. Some developments prohibit metal siding or require earth-tone colors to blend with the wooded setting.
Land use — Whether you can operate a short-term rental, run a home business, or keep certain animals. With Nashville's popularity as a weekend destination, rental restrictions come up frequently. Some HOAs welcome vacation rentals; others prohibit them entirely.
Tree removal and clearing — Brown County's beauty comes from those trees. Many covenants limit how much vegetation you can clear, require approval before removing mature trees, or mandate replanting if you do clear land.
Building approval processes — Some developments require architectural review before you build anything, including decks, sheds, or additions. This means submitting plans and waiting for approval before breaking ground.
Before you fall in love with a cabin at a listing in Spring 2026, know that we'll search for any recorded covenants as part of your title work. These restrictions show up in the chain of title, and we include them in your closing documents.
Here's what matters: read them before closing. Not skim—actually read. If you're planning to build a workshop, convert the property to a vacation rental, or add a yurt for your mother-in-law, the covenants might have something to say about it.
We've seen buyers discover after closing that their plans don't align with what the covenants allow. That's a hard conversation to have with your builder after you've already purchased.
Where there are covenants, there's often an HOA collecting dues and enforcing rules. Brown County HOA fees tend to fund things like road maintenance (especially important on those winding gravel roads that access many cabin properties), common area upkeep, or community amenities.
Some Brown County HOAs are active, with regular meetings and consistent enforcement. Others exist mostly on paper, collecting modest fees for road maintenance and leaving owners to their own devices otherwise. The community's personality matters as much as the written rules.
Before closing, find out:
We can point you toward the right contacts, but talking to current residents gives you the real picture of how the community operates day-to-day.
Many Brown County properties—especially older homes in Nashville proper or rural acreage outside subdivisions—have no HOA at all. You might have deed restrictions recorded decades ago by a previous owner, but no active organization enforcing them.
These properties offer more freedom but come with their own considerations. Without an HOA maintaining shared roads, you and your neighbors coordinate (or don't) on things like gravel, snow removal, and drainage.
Neither situation is better or worse—it depends entirely on what you want from your Brown County home.
Brown County attracts people seeking something different from suburban life. The good news: there's variety here. Some folks want the security of knowing their neighbor won't park an RV in the front yard. Others want forty acres where nobody tells them what to do.
Both exist in Brown County. The key is matching the property's restrictions (or lack thereof) with how you actually plan to live.
When you're searching for your place in the hills this spring, ask about covenants early. Your real estate agent can pull the recorded restrictions, and we'll include them in your title search. Read them with your actual plans in mind—not just what you want today, but what you might want in five years.
Your Brown County cabin should feel like freedom, not a list of rules you didn't expect.