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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Night Caps

Night Caps: Berkeley vs San Leandro

How do night caps rules compare between Berkeley, CA and San Leandro, CA?

San Leandro has fewer restrictions than Berkeley.

Berkeley, CA

Alameda County

Heavy Restrictions

Berkeley limits un-hosted short-term rentals to 90 nights per calendar year. Hosted stays (where the host remains on-site) have no annual cap.

View full Berkeley rules β†’

San Leandro, CA

Alameda County

Some Restrictions

San Leandro may impose annual night caps on unhosted STR stays to preserve long-term housing. Hosted stays typically have no cap under current rules.

View full San Leandro rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBerkeleySan Leandro
Un-hosted Cap90 nights per calendar year-
HostedNo annual cap-
ResetJanuary 1 each year-
Violation FineUp to 1,000 dollars per day-
Platform DataShared with Berkeley for enforcement-
Unhosted Cap-90-180 nights typical
Hosted Cap-Usually none
Tracking-Operator responsibility
Reporting-With TOT returns
Violation-Fines, permit loss

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Berkeley FAQ

What counts as hosted vs un-hosted?

Hosted means the host is physically present in the dwelling during the guest stay. Un-hosted means the guest has the home to themselves.

How does Berkeley track the 90-night cap?

Hosts self-report, and platforms share booking data with the city under data-sharing agreements.

San Leandro FAQ

Does San Leandro have a firm night cap?

Policy may vary. Verify current municipal code. Common California caps are 90 to 180 nights per year for unhosted stays.

Do hosted stays count toward the cap?

Generally no. Hosted stays where the primary resident remains on-site are typically uncapped under most city rules.

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