π Short-Term Rentals Guides
Airbnb and VRBO permit requirements, noise rules, taxes, and parking rules.
Featured Articles
Short-Term Rental Laws Are Changing Fast: Here's What Happened in 2025
From San Diego license caps to Denver penalty hikes, 2025 brought a wave of new short-term rental regulations across the country.
Best and Worst Cities for Short-Term Rental Hosts (2026)
Short-term rental regulations have tightened dramatically in many cities. Here is where hosts have the most freedom and where the rules are most punishing.
Airbnb Hosting: Permits You Need Before Your First Listing
Before you publish that Airbnb listing, there is a stack of permits, registrations, and tax obligations most hosts do not know about. Here is the complete checklist.
California Short-Term Rental Rules: Airbnb and VRBO Regulations (2026)
Short-term rental regulations in California vary dramatically by city. Here is what hosts need to know about permits, taxes, and restrictions in 2026.
Florida Short-Term Rental Rules: What Hosts Need to Know (2026)
Florida short-term rental regulations are set at both the state and local level. Here is what Airbnb and VRBO hosts need to know in 2026.
NYC Short-Term Rental Rules: Airbnb Regulations (2026)
New York City has some of the strictest short-term rental regulations in the country. Here is what hosts need to know in 2026.
Las Vegas Short-Term Rental Rules for Airbnb Hosts (2026)
Las Vegas short-term rental regulations have tightened in recent years. Here is what hosts need to know about permits and rules in 2026.
Short-Term Rental and Airbnb Rules: What Every Host Needs to Know
Short-term rental regulations have tightened dramatically. Here is a practical overview of the licensing, tax, and compliance requirements hosts face in 2026.
Do I Need a Permit to Airbnb My Home? A Host Guide for 2026
Most cities now require some form of registration, licensing, or permit for short-term rentals. Here is what you need to know before listing your property.
Short-Term Rental Laws by State: The Complete 2026 Guide
Short-term rental law is a patchwork of state preemption statutes, city permit regimes, and platform-accountability rules. Here is how it actually works in 2026, state by state.
New York Short-Term Rental Rules by City: NYC Local Law 18 and Beyond
New York operates the strictest short-term rental regime in the United States, anchored by a state Multiple Dwelling Law that effectively bans most NYC apartment rentals under 30 days and a 2021 local law that requires every legal host to register with the city. Outside the five boroughs, rules vary city by city, from Buffalo and Rochester permit programs to outright bans in parts of the Hamptons. Here is how short-term rental law actually works across New York State in 2026.
Nevada Short-Term Rental Regulations by City: Las Vegas, Reno, and Beyond in 2026
Nevada short-term rental law is a story of one statute and ten very different cities. Assembly Bill 363 of 2021 set a statewide floor for licensing in counties over 700,000 β meaning Clark County only β while leaving the rest of the state on the home-rule model. The result is a regulatory map where a license in unincorporated Clark County, the City of Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Reno, and Washoe County are all distinct legal instruments with different fees, buffer distances, and enforcement regimes. Here is how Nevada STR law actually works in 2026.
Georgia Short-Term Rental and Tenant Rules by City: Atlanta to the Golden Isles in 2026
Georgia is one of the most landlord-friendly states in the country, with a thin statewide tenant code, a hard statutory ban on rent control, and a short-term rental landscape that the legislature has so far refused to preempt. The result: city ordinances do nearly all the heavy lifting, and the rules in Atlanta, Savannah, Athens, and the Golden Isles look almost nothing alike.
Tennessee Short-Term Rental Regulations by City: Nashville to the Smokies in 2026
Tennessee short-term rental law is governed by one of the strongest state preemption statutes in the country. The Tennessee Short-Term Rental Unit Act, passed in 2018 and codified at TCA Β§13-7-602 through Β§13-7-605, bars cities from banning short-term rentals while still allowing them broad authority over registration, taxation, and operating standards. The result is a market that is enormous in absolute terms β Nashville, Gatlinburg, Sevierville, and Pigeon Forge are among the most active STR markets in the United States β but governed by a tangle of city ordinances that diverge sharply on owner-occupancy, occupancy caps, and where non-owner rentals are permitted at all. Here is how Tennessee STR law actually works in 2026.
Short-Term Rentals Rules by City
Detailed guides covering all short-term rentals rules for each city.