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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Night Caps

Night Caps: Charlotte vs Huntersville

How do night caps rules compare between Charlotte, NC and Huntersville, NC?

Charlotte and Huntersville have similar restriction levels.

Charlotte, NC

Mecklenburg County

Few Restrictions

Charlotte has not enacted annual night caps limiting how many days a short-term rental can host paying guests. North Carolina's preemption framework constrains cities from imposing operational limits tied to property registration.

View full Charlotte rules β†’

Huntersville, NC

Mecklenburg County

Few Restrictions

Huntersville does not impose a maximum number of rental nights per year. NCGS 160D-1207 limits the authority of cities to cap STR nights unless applied uniformly to all rentals. STR operators can rent year-round subject to tax and zoning compliance.

View full Huntersville rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCharlotteHuntersville
Annual night capNone set-
Mecklenburg occupancy tax8 percent-
State sales taxApplies to rentals-
Preemption authorityNCGS Chapter 160D-
Annual Cap-None
Minimum Stay-None by city
State Law-NCGS 160D-1207 preempts
HOA-May set minimum stays
Occupancy Tax-Mecklenburg 8%

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Charlotte FAQ

Is there a maximum number of STR nights per year?

No. Charlotte has not adopted an annual night cap, and state law limits cities from imposing operational ceilings tied to STR registration.

What taxes apply to STR nights?

Mecklenburg County's 8% room occupancy tax plus North Carolina state sales tax apply to each booking, regardless of duration or frequency.

Huntersville FAQ

Is there a limit on how many nights I can rent per year in Huntersville?

No. Huntersville has no night cap and NCGS 160D-1207 preempts the town from adopting one that targets STRs.

Do I still need to collect taxes without a night cap?

Yes. NC sales tax (4.75%), Mecklenburg local sales (2%), and Mecklenburg occupancy tax (8%) all apply regardless of nights rented.

Can my HOA require 30-day minimum stays?

Yes. NC Chapter 47F allows HOAs to enforce minimum-stay covenants even where the town cannot.

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