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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Night Caps

Night Caps: Escondido vs Fallbrook

How do night caps rules compare between Escondido, CA and Fallbrook, CA?

Fallbrook has fewer restrictions than Escondido.

Escondido, CA

San Diego County

Some Restrictions

Non-hosted (whole-home) STRs in Escondido are capped at 180 rental nights per calendar year. Hosted rentals (owner on-site) have no night cap. Permit and 10% TOT required.

View full Escondido rules β†’

Fallbrook, CA

San Diego County

Few Restrictions

Unincorporated San Diego County imposes no annual night cap on short-term rentals. Unlike the City of San Diego's tiered STRO program, the County does not require a short-term rental license or limit rental nights per year. Operators must register for a Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) certificate (effective July 1, 2024) and remit 8% TOT for stays of 30 days or less.

View full Fallbrook rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactEscondidoFallbrook
Non-Hosted Cap180 nights/year-
Hosted RentalsNo cap-
TOT Rate10% of rent8% of rent
ReportingQuarterly to city-
RecordkeepingDates + guest names required-
Annual Night Cap-None (unincorporated County)
STR License Required-No
TOT Threshold-Stays of 30 days or less
TOT Registration Opened-June 11, 2024
Reporting Began-July 1, 2024
Authority-Treasurer-Tax Collector / Sheriff / Code Enforcement
Cities Excluded-San Diego, Chula Vista, Carlsbad, Encinitas, etc.

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Escondido FAQ

Does Escondido count days the unit is offered but unbooked?

No β€” only actual rental nights (bookings with paying guests) count toward the 180-night cap. Vacant nights do not accrue.

What qualifies as a hosted rental in Escondido?

A hosted rental means the property owner is physically present on-site (same parcel) during the guest's stay. Hosted rentals are exempt from the 180-night cap.

Fallbrook FAQ

Is there a limit on how many nights I can rent my property in unincorporated San Diego County?

No. The County has not adopted a short-term rental ordinance with an annual night cap. Unlike the City of San Diego, which restricts most non-primary-residence whole-home rentals through its tiered STRO licensing program, the unincorporated County does not impose night limits. You must, however, register for a TOT certificate and remit 8% Transient Occupancy Tax on stays of 30 days or less.

Do I need a permit or license from the County to short-term rent in an unincorporated area?

No business license is required, but you must register through the County of San Diego TOT portal (tot.sdttc.com) and obtain a TOT certificate. The TOT certificate is explicitly not a permit to operate and does not excuse you from complying with zoning, building, fire, and health rules. Coastal-zone properties may also be subject to California Coastal Commission jurisdiction.

Does this apply if my property is inside a city like Chula Vista or Encinitas?

No. The County Zoning Ordinance and the County TOT apply only in the unincorporated area. Each incorporated city in San Diego County (San Diego, Chula Vista, Carlsbad, Coronado, Del Mar, El Cajon, Encinitas, Escondido, Imperial Beach, La Mesa, Lemon Grove, National City, Oceanside, Poway, San Marcos, Santee, Solana Beach, Vista) administers its own STR ordinance, license, and TOT rate.

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