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Short-Term Rentals

Vineyard's Short-Term Rentals: The Rules That Matter

By CityRuleLookup Editorial Team

Every city handles short-term rentals a little differently. In Vineyard, California, there are 5 distinct rules that residents and property owners should be aware of. Some are stricter than what neighboring cities enforce, and others are more relaxed. Here is what you need to know.

Noise Rules

Sacramento County Code §4.08 imposes 'good neighbor' noise obligations on Vineyard STR operators: guests must comply with SCC Ch. 6.68 noise limits, and the permitted operator must provide 24/7 contact information for noise complaints.

Key details: Code Reference: SCC §4.08 + Ch. 6.68. Local Contact Response Time: 60 minutes (24/7). Quiet Hours Apply: 10 p.m. - 7 a.m.. Permit Revocation Trigger: 3 noise complaints / 12 mo.

Noise violations are dual-tracked: (a) the guest receives a citation under SCC §6.68 (misdemeanor up to $1,000); (b) the operator receives an STR permit administrative penalty starting at $1,500. Permit revocation after three substantiated complaints in 12 months means a 12-month moratorium on reapplication.

Parking Rules

Sacramento County Code §4.08 requires Vineyard STR operators to provide off-street parking for all guest vehicles - typically one space per bedroom. Guest parking on adjacent residential streets is restricted, and overflow on lawns or in setbacks is prohibited.

Key details: Off-Street Required: 1 space per bedroom. Code Reference: SCC §4.08 + Zoning §5.9. 72-Hour Street Limit: SCC §10.24.

Parking violations are cited under §10.24 (county code, up to $100 first offense) and Cal Veh Code §22500 (up to $73). Repeated STR parking complaints are grounds for permit conditions or revocation under §4.08.

Occupancy Limits

Sacramento County Code §4.08 caps Vineyard STR overnight occupancy at two adults per bedroom plus two additional, with hard maximums tied to septic capacity, parking availability and CalFire emergency-egress requirements.

Key details: Overnight Formula: (2 x bedrooms) + 2. Daytime Max: 2x overnight count. Events Allowed: No (prohibited under §4.08).

Exceeding posted occupancy is a §4.08 violation with administrative penalties starting at $1,500 first violation, $3,000 second, and $5,000 third. Repeat violations are grounds for STR permit revocation and TOT-license cancellation.

Permit Requirements

Vineyard falls under Sacramento County Code Ch. 4.08 (Short-Term Rental) - all STRs in unincorporated Sacramento County must be the operator's PRIMARY RESIDENCE and require both a Short-Term Rental Permit ($230 initial fee) and a separate County Business License. Non-primary-residence rentals are prohibited.

Key details: Code Chapter: SCC Ch. 4.08 - Short-Term Rental. Primary Residence Required: Yes (6+ months/year). Application Fee: $230 initial. TOT Rate: 12% (SCC Ch. 3.08). First-Offense Fine: Up to $1,500.

SCC §4.08 penalties: up to $1,500 first violation, up to $3,000 second within one year, and up to $5,000 for each additional violation within one year. Operating an unpermitted STR also subjects the operator to back-collection of Transient Occupancy Tax (12%) plus penalties under SCC Ch. 3.08.

Compared to other cities, Vineyard takes a harder line on permit requirements. The enforcement and penalty structure reflects that.

Taxes & Fees

Vineyard STR operators must collect and remit Sacramento County's Transient Occupancy Tax at 12% on rentals under 30 consecutive days, per SCC Chapter 3.08. TOT is in addition to the $230 STR permit fee and the County business license fee.

Key details: TOT Rate: 12%. Threshold: Rentals under 30 consecutive days. Filing Frequency: Quarterly. Code Chapter: SCC Ch. 3.08. Late Penalty: 10% + 0.5%/month interest.

Failure to collect or remit TOT triggers a 10% delinquency penalty plus 0.5% per month interest under SCC §3.08, plus possible permit revocation under §4.08. Knowing failure to remit collected TOT is a misdemeanor under SCC §3.08 with fines up to $1,000.

This is one of the stricter rules in Vineyard's municipal code. If you are unsure whether your situation complies, it is worth checking with the city before proceeding.

The Bottom Line

Vineyard is tougher than many cities when it comes to short-term rentals. Out of the 5 rules covered here, 2 are rated strict. If you are a homeowner, renter, or business owner in Vineyard, take the time to understand these requirements before they become a problem. Most violations come with fines, and some repeat violations can escalate.

Keep in mind that Vineyard can amend these rules at any council meeting. For the most current version of any rule mentioned here, check the specific ordinance page, where we track updates as they happen.