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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Noise Rules

Noise Rules: Fairfield vs Vallejo

How do noise rules rules compare between Fairfield, CA and Vallejo, CA?

Vallejo has fewer restrictions than Fairfield.

Fairfield, CA

Solano County

Heavy Restrictions

Because Fairfield does not separately permit sub-30-day rentals in residential zones, the City has no STR-specific noise schedule. Any lawful transient lodging (hotel, motel, B&B) and any 30+ day rental remains subject to the citywide noise ordinance in Chapter 25, Article X of the Municipal Code, which prohibits noise levels at neighboring properties exceeding the limits in Table 25.1401 (generally 55 dBA daytime / 50 dBA nighttime at residential property lines, with 10 PM-7 AM treated as the nighttime period). 'Unnecessary noises' that are annoying to persons of ordinary sensitivity are independently actionable as a nuisance.

View full Fairfield rules β†’

Vallejo, CA

Solano County

Some Restrictions

Vallejo STRs must comply with general noise ordinance. Many cities impose stricter quiet hours for rental properties. Complaints can trigger permit review.

View full Vallejo rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactFairfieldVallejo
Code AuthorityFMC Chapter 25, Article X-
Nighttime Period10:00 PM - 7:00 AM-
Residential Daytime Limit~55 dBA (Table 25.1401)-
Residential Nighttime Limit~50 dBA (Table 25.1401)-
Subjective Standard'Unnecessary noises' nuisance test-
Travis AFB AircraftFederally preempted-
Quiet Hours-10 PM to 8 AM typical
Parties-Generally prohibited
Response-Host must respond promptly
Topic-Noise Rules

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Fairfield FAQ

Do STRs in Fairfield have stricter noise rules than other homes?

No, because Fairfield does not separately permit short-term rentals in residential zones, there is no STR-specific noise schedule. Any transient lodging that is lawfully operating (commercial-zone hotels or B&Bs) and any long-term residential tenancy is subject to the same Chapter 25, Article X limits at the receiving property line: approximately 55 dBA daytime and 50 dBA nighttime at residential property lines per Table 25.1401, with 10 PM-7 AM as the nighttime period.

Who pays the fine if my guest causes a noise violation?

The property owner and the operator are both responsible. Fairfield's enforcement and California nuisance law (Civil Code Β§3479) hold the property owner liable for nuisances on the property regardless of whether a tenant or guest caused them. For a sub-30-day rental, the host also faces the underlying zoning violation, which can stack with the noise citation. Including a clear quiet-hours clause and a contact phone number in your booking listing helps mitigate but does not eliminate operator liability.

Vallejo FAQ

Can STR guests have parties?

No. Most cities prohibit events or gatherings exceeding the permitted occupancy at STR properties.

What happens with noise complaints?

Host must respond promptly. Multiple verified complaints may result in permit suspension.

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