HOA Ham Radio Antenna Guide | Greyline Performance

 

Signal Lab — HOA Series

HOA Ham Radio Antenna Guide:
You Have More Options Than You Think

You passed your exam. You built the shack. You have a radio that can reach the other side of the planet — if you had an antenna outside. Then you read your CC&Rs.

The good news: the HOA antenna problem is almost always more solvable than it looks on first read. In many cases it's already solved by the antenna itself — before you talk to the board, before you file anything, before anyone has to know you're a ham.

Step One

Identify Which Problem You Actually Have

Most operators assume one big problem — "my HOA won't allow antennas." In practice there are three distinct situations, each with a different solution path. Identifying yours first saves a lot of unnecessary stress.

Situation 1

CC&Rs permit flagpoles

The most common situation — and it may mean you're already done. A flagpole approval is a flagpole approval. The DX Flagpole's RF function is none of the board's business.

Next step: Submit the Architectural Brief →

Situation 2

Home approval needed first

For many operators, the XYL is the harder audience. The objections are aesthetic — nobody wants an eyesore. Answer: the DX Flagpole is a flagpole. A good-looking one.

Next step: Property Value & Neighbor FAQ →

Situation 3

Denied or expecting a fight

The legal landscape is shifting in operators' favor. Depending on your state, you may have statutory protections that preempt your CC&Rs. Know your rights before you accept a no.

Next step: HOA Legislation Resource Center →

The Cleanest Solution

An Antenna That Doesn't Trigger the Conversation

The most elegant answer to the HOA antenna problem isn't a legal argument or a negotiation strategy. It's an antenna that presents as a residential flagpole, performs as a serious HF station, and gives nobody a reason to ask questions.

Five sizes. 12 feet through 28 feet. Every model covers 160 through 6 meters from a single feedpoint. No radials — no buried wire, no counterpoise, no ground system. Commercial-grade construction: heavy-wall 6061-T6 aluminum, 316 stainless hardware. ASCE 7-10 engineered. Made in Sun Valley, Idaho.

The antenna function is entirely internal. No visible stubs, no loading coils, no radial wires. Nothing that reads as "radio equipment" to anyone not looking for it. Fly your flag. Work the bands.
Model Height Wind — Flag Down Best For
DXF12 12 ft 155 MPH (ASCE 7-10) Townhomes, tight lots, high-wind regions
DXF16 16 ft 115 MPH (ASCE 7-10) Front entry, side yard, compact suburban lot
DXF20 20 ft 90 MPH (ASCE 7-10) Most popular — full residential flagpole scale
DXF24 24 ft 70 MPH (ASCE 7-10) HOA lots, strong low-band aperture
DXF28 28 ft 55 MPH (ASCE 7-10) Larger lots, low-wind regions, maximum aperture

Your Complete Toolkit

HOA Approval Resources — Nothing to Write From Scratch

Every document below is professionally formatted and ready to use. They've been field-tested by operators across the country at every stage of the approval process.

Start Here

HOA & XYL Approval HQ

The central hub. Orients you to the full suite of resources and helps you identify which documents apply to your situation.

HOA & XYL Approval HQ →

For Board Submission

The Architectural Brief

A formal engineering document for HOA architectural review. Frames the DX Flagpole as a property asset. Print and submit.

Download the Architectural Brief →

For Home & Neighbor Conversations

Property Value & Neighbor FAQ

Addresses aesthetic, property value, and RFI concerns. Written for the audience that needs to be convinced — not the ham doing the convincing.

Property Value & Neighbor FAQ →

For Skeptical Boards

Commercial-Grade Flagpole Guide

Confirms Greyline systems meet construction standards used by government agencies, embassies, and luxury estates. When a board questions quality standards.

Commercial-Grade Guide →

For Denied Operators

HOA Legislation Resource Center

PRB-1. The Amateur Radio Parity Act. Current bill status in Congress. State-level protections. HOAs can regulate placement and height — they cannot say no outright. Know your legal position before you accept a denial as final.

HOA Legislation Resource Center →

Frequently Asked Questions

HOA Antenna Questions — Answered

Do I have to disclose to my HOA that the flagpole is also an antenna?
You are requesting approval to install a residential flagpole. That is accurate and complete. You are not legally required to disclose the RF function any more than you're required to explain the internal workings of any other home fixture. If asked directly, answer honestly — but the flagpole approval stands entirely on its own merits, independent of its amateur radio function.
What if my HOA has never approved a flagpole before?
That's fine — most haven't, because most residents don't ask. The absence of prior approvals doesn't mean flagpoles are prohibited. Check your CC&Rs for the flagpole language, submit a complete package using the Architectural Brief, and give the board a clear, easy path to yes. A calm, well-documented request from a homeowner who clearly cares about property aesthetics is a very different conversation than an adversarial demand.
Will the flagpole cause RFI complaints from neighbors?
The VDA balanced feedpoint design is inherently less prone to common-mode RF on the feedline than unbalanced antenna designs — which is the primary source of neighbor RFI complaints. Properly installed with a good feedline choke at the antenna base, Greyline operators consistently report clean, interference-free operation in residential environments. The Neighbor FAQ covers this in detail.
I live in an apartment or condo. Can I still use a Greyline antenna?
Condominiums and apartments present different challenges — typically you don't own the exterior structure. An adjacent green space, garden, or doorway-landing approach is a common approval in these settings for the DXF and DXV series. A deck or rooftop installation may be possible depending on your building's policies. See the DX Vertical line →
Does federal law protect my right to install an amateur radio antenna?
FCC PRB-1 requires local government zoning authorities to reasonably accommodate amateur radio antennas — but it applies to municipal zoning, not private HOA CC&Rs directly. The Amateur Radio Parity Act seeks to extend those protections to private deed restrictions and has passed the House with strong bipartisan support multiple times. State-level protections vary and are worth checking for your location. Full details at the HOA Legislation Resource Center →
What's the fastest path from HOA approval to on the air?
If your CC&Rs permit flagpoles: submit the Architectural Brief, order the antenna and ATU bundle simultaneously, and install when approval comes through. Most operators report HOA flagpole approvals as straightforward once a complete package is submitted. The antenna goes up in under an hour when you are all set to go. The ATU learns your band-habits in the first few operating sessions. From submission to first contact is typically weeks, not months. Shop Antenna + ATU Bundles →
What sizes are available and which is right for my lot?
Five models: DXF12 through DXF28. The DXF20 is the most popular for standard suburban lots — it's the scale most people picture when they think "residential flagpole." Smaller lots and high-wind regions favor the shorter models, of course. Larger lots and operators wanting maximum low-band aperture gravitate toward the DXF24 and DXF28. The Selection Guide walks through the decision in detail. Remember, we do have a 9' Whip that weighs just 2 lbs. A great low-wind-drag option.

A Decade of HOA Installs

The HOA problem is real. We won't pretend it isn't. But it's been solved by operators before you — in the tightest HOA neighborhoods on Earth, with skeptical boards, with XYLs who needed convincing — and the solution is usually simpler than expected. An antenna that looks like a flagpole, installs like a flagpole, and performs like the serious HF antenna it is. The neighbors see a flagpole, because it is a DX Flagpole. The bands are open.

Ham Radio is fun again! Pass it on... 73, The Greyline Performance Team