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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Occupancy Limits

Occupancy Limits: Burbank vs Carson

How do occupancy limits rules compare between Burbank, CA and Carson, CA?

Carson has fewer restrictions than Burbank.

Burbank, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Not applicable. Short-term rentals are banned in Burbank. No occupancy limits for STRs have been established since the use is prohibited.

View full Burbank rules →

Carson, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Carson does not impose STR-specific occupancy caps. Maximum occupancy defaults to the California Building Code / Housing Code minimum room-size standards adopted by Carson under its Building Code (CMC eCode360 §47244988, adopting Title 24 CCR) and the substandard-housing limits in Cal. Health & Safety Code §17920.3, which deems rooms below required dimensions a sanitation deficiency.

View full Carson rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactBurbankCarson
STR StatusBanned-
Occupancy RulesN/A - STRs not permitted-
CodeBMC 10-1-602-
TopicOccupancy Limits-
STR-specific cap-None — no Carson STR ordinance
Default minimum room area-120 sq ft first occupant, +70 sq ft each additional (Uniform Housing Code via Title 25 CCR)
Sleeping room minimum-50 sq ft per person sharing
Substandard housing-Cal. Health & Safety Code §17920.3 — undersized rooms a code violation
Building Code adoption-CMC Building Code, eCode360 §47244988

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Burbank FAQ

How many guests can stay in my short-term rental?

Typically 2 guests per bedroom plus 2 additional guests.

What happens if guests exceed the occupancy limit?

The host is responsible. Violations can result in fines and potential permit revocation in Burbank.

Carson FAQ

How many guests can I have in a Carson STR?

Carson has no STR-specific occupancy cap. Default housing-code minimums apply: 120 sq ft for the first occupant and 70 sq ft for each additional, with 50 sq ft per person in shared sleeping rooms.

Can the city cite me for overcrowding?

Yes. Cal. Health & Safety Code §17920.3 treats undersized rooms as a substandard-housing condition enforceable by city building/code-enforcement officials.

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