We the Homeowner connects legislation, case law, homeowner experiences, and advocacy tools to help people understand the laws and systems that shape homeownership in America.
Track bills affecting homeowners and homebuyers across all issue areas: property rights, HOA and condo governance, foreclosure and lien laws, insurance, taxation, consumer protections, and housing policy reform.
Follow key court decisions shaping homeowner rights, association authority, foreclosure procedures, records access, consumer protections, and enforcement at the state and federal level.
Document and connect patterns across HOA governance disputes, foreclosure threats, insurance issues, assessment challenges, discrimination concerns, and other homeownership problems that need policy attention.
Help homeowners and homebuyers move from awareness to action with legislative alerts, policy engagement tools, testimony support, educational resources, and community organizing tools.
Georgia currently has the deepest coverage on this platform: comprehensive legislative tracking, case law monitoring, and active advocacy infrastructure. This is intentional. Georgia is the pilot state that proves the model before we scale it nationally.
Other states are being added continuously as verified research, legislative monitoring, and homeowner-submitted reports become available. If your state is not yet fully covered, you can still submit incidents, track legislation, and help build the database.
The legal and policy environment around homeownership is complex, fast-moving, and rarely explained in plain language. We built this platform to change that.
Property rights, HOA governance rules, foreclosure protections, and consumer laws are rarely explained to homeowners in accessible language.
HOA boards, local governments, insurance companies, and lenders each operate under separate rules that few homeowners have the time or resources to understand.
Dozens of bills are filed every legislative session affecting property rights, association governance, insurance, taxation, and foreclosure. Most homeowners never know.
Homeowners face common problems in isolation. When those experiences are documented and connected, they become evidence for reform.