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🏨 Hotels & Lodging/Transient Occupancy Tax

Transient Occupancy Tax: Austin vs Pflugerville

How do transient occupancy tax rules compare between Austin, TX and Pflugerville, TX?

Austin and Pflugerville have similar restriction levels.

Austin, TX

Travis County

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 11 imposes an 11 percent municipal hotel occupancy tax on stays under 30 days, layered atop the 6 percent Texas state HOT, totaling 17 percent on Austin lodging; short-term rentals owe the same tax through platform collection or direct remittance.

View full Austin rules β†’

Pflugerville, TX

Travis County

Some Restrictions

Hotels and short-term rentals in Travis County collect a combined hotel occupancy tax of roughly fifteen percent, including six percent state and up to nine percent municipal in Austin, plus a venue tax for tourism and convention projects.

View full Pflugerville rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactAustinPflugerville
City rate11 percent-
State rate6 percent-
Local ordinanceAustin Code Ch. 11-
Exempt stay length30 consecutive days-
Allowed usesTourism, arts, historic, venues-
State HOT-Six percent
Austin city HOT-Nine percent
Combined Austin-About seventeen percent
Stay threshold-Under thirty days

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Austin FAQ

What is the total hotel tax rate in Austin?

Seventeen percent: 11 percent Austin city hotel occupancy tax plus 6 percent Texas state hotel tax. Some venue-district overlays add small extra fees, but the base lodging tax is 17 percent.

Does Airbnb collect Austin's hotel tax automatically?

Yes. Airbnb, Vrbo, and Booking.com collect both the city and state HOT and remit on the host's behalf. Hosts using non-collecting platforms must register and file monthly themselves.

Pflugerville FAQ

Do platforms collect tax automatically?

Major platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo collect state HOT and many city HOTs at booking, but operators should verify their listing and reconcile filings each month.

Are stays over thirty days exempt?

Yes. Texas exempts continuous stays of thirty days or more by the same guest from hotel occupancy tax; documentation is required to support the exemption.

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