Membership & dues

Pay your dues, know your membership

2026 annual dues are $535 for the membership year May 1, 2026 – April 30, 2027. Pay before using the club facilities — here's every way to do it.

Three ways to pay

How to pay

Start by completing the 2026 Member Information Form so we know who's in your household — you'll receive an invoice by email.

Fill out the 2026 Member Information Form

Create the 2026 Member Information Form as a Google Form (household names, address, email, phone, member type) and replace the # in the button above with the form's share URL.

Know what a real WOPHA invoice looks like. Official dues invoices are emailed from the treasurer (wophatreasurer@gmail.com) — they may arrive via QuickBooks and can look automated, but they're legitimate. Two cautions: pay only the invoice addressed to your household (each invoice link is tied to your home's account), and ignore any email asking for dues by gift card, wire, or payment app — a fraudulent email impersonating WOPHA circulated in 2026. When in doubt, call a board member before paying.

1. Pay online (recommended)

Pay from your bank account or by card in about a minute. Bank transfer costs the HOA less, so please use it if you can.

Pay $535 by bank transfer

Pay by card

Create a free Stripe account for the HOA and set up two Payment Links for $535: one that accepts ACH/bank transfer (make this the default — the fee is about $5 versus about $16 for a card on $535) and one that accepts cards. Paste each Payment Link URL into the buttons above.

2. Zelle

Send your dues to the treasurer with Zelle. Put your property address in the memo so we can match your payment to your home.

Confirm that the HOA's bank supports Zelle for the association account, then publish the Zelle email address or phone number here.

3. Check

Make your check payable to WOPHA.

Contact Joel Tarpley at JTarpley40@yahoo.com to arrange a drop-off or pickup.

How membership works

Member types

If you own a home in Woods of Parkview, you're a member — membership is automatic and mandatory under the covenants. What kind of member you are is up to you.

Full Members

Residents with full access to the pool and tennis courts. This is most of the neighborhood.

Social Members

Residents who opt out of pool and tennis access. Your dues still support landscaping, insurance, and the common areas. A Social membership converts to Full when the property sells.

Annual Non-Resident Members

A limited number of non-resident households can join for $535 per season and enjoy the pool and courts alongside their neighbors.

Spread the word

Refer a friend, earn $50

$50 referral incentive

Know a family outside the neighborhood who'd love a summer at the pool? You earn $50 for each new joining member you refer.

Non-resident membership

We open a limited number of Annual Non-Resident Memberships each season at $535. Not ready for a full membership? Non-members can still play tennis for a seasonal fee — $35 per adult or $25 per junior.

Tennis fees and court reservations →

Transparency

Where your dues go

Your $535 runs the whole neighborhood. The big buckets, per the annual budget presented each year at the annual meeting:

Pool

Pool management and lifeguards (Positively Pools), chemicals, utilities, and repairs.

Grounds & courts

Landscaping of the common areas, court lighting and maintenance, picnic areas.

Insurance & operations

Liability insurance, security cameras, utilities, and reserves for the big repairs every facility eventually needs.

Treasurer: replace this note with the current year's budget summary (a simple table of category and amount from the annual-meeting presentation). Numbers build more trust than categories.