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🏨 Hotels & Lodging/Transient Occupancy Tax

Long Beach vs Palmdale

How do transient occupancy tax rules compare between Long Beach, CA and Palmdale, CA?

Long Beach and Palmdale have similar restriction levels.

Long Beach, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Long Beach charges a 12% Transient Occupancy Tax on hotel, motel, and short-term lodging stays under 30 days. Operators collect from guests at registration and remit monthly to the city Treasurer.

View full Long Beach rules β†’

Palmdale, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Code Title 4.72 imposes a 12 percent transient occupancy tax on lodging stays under 30 days in unincorporated areas, including hotels, motels, and short-term rentals. The Treasurer-Tax Collector registers operators and audits monthly remittances.

View full Palmdale rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLong BeachPalmdale
TOT rate12% of rent-
Code sectionLBMC Chapter 3.64LA County Code Title 4.72
ThresholdUnder 30 consecutive days-
FilingMonthly remittance-
Administered byFinancial Management Dept-
Rate-12 percent of room charge
Stay threshold-Under 30 days
Coverage-Unincorporated areas only
Platform collection-Airbnb, Vrbo agreements

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Long Beach FAQ

Do short-term rentals owe TOT?

Yes. Hosts of permitted short-term rentals must collect and remit the 12% TOT, in addition to compliance with Long Beach STR registration requirements.

Is a 30-night stay taxed?

No. Stays of 30 consecutive days or longer are exempt occupancies under LBMC 3.64. Tax applies only when occupancy is genuinely transient.

Palmdale FAQ

If I run an Airbnb in Altadena, do I collect TOT?

Yes, but Airbnb typically remits on your behalf under its voluntary collection agreement with LA County. You must still register your unit with the Treasurer-Tax Collector and confirm the platform is reporting your stays correctly.

Does the county TOT apply inside cities?

No. The 12 percent county TOT applies only in unincorporated areas. Cities like Los Angeles (14 percent), Santa Monica (14 percent), and West Hollywood (12.5 percent) run their own TOTs through municipal ordinances.

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