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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Extended Home Share

Los Angeles vs Norwalk

How do extended home share rules compare between Los Angeles, CA and Norwalk, CA?

Los Angeles has fewer restrictions than Norwalk.

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Los Angeles offers an Extended Home-Share permit under LAMC Β§12.22 A.32(d) that lifts the standard 120-night annual cap, requiring a clean compliance history, additional fees, and case-by-case Department of City Planning approval with neighbor notice.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Norwalk, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Unlike Los Angeles City, unincorporated Los Angeles County offers no extended home-share permit. Title 22.140.290 caps unhosted rentals at 30 nights per year with no path to lift that limit while keeping the host offsite.

View full Norwalk rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLos AngelesNorwalk
EligibilityOne year compliant operation-
Application feeApproximately $850-
Neighbor notice500-foot radius-
Permit termTwo years, renewable-
Excluded unitsRSO, ADU, non-primary-
Extended permit available-No, unlike LA City
Unhosted cap-30 nights, hard limit
Hosted alternative-No annual cap if onsite
Beyond 30 nights option-Conditional Use Permit
Applies to-Unincorporated areas only

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Los Angeles FAQ

How do I apply for an Extended Home-Share permit?

File a discretionary application with the Department of City Planning, pay the additional fee, and provide notice to neighbors within 500 feet. A planner reviews your compliance history and any complaints.

Does the permit remove the primary-residence requirement?

No. Extended Home-Share lifts only the 120-night cap. The dwelling must still be your registered primary residence under LAMC Β§12.22 A.32(a)(2) throughout the permit term.

Norwalk FAQ

Can I get a permit to rent unhosted year-round?

No standard permit lifts the 30-night cap. You can pursue a Conditional Use Permit for a bed-and-breakfast or transient lodging use under Title 22.140.110, but that requires zoning compatibility and a hearing.

Does staying onsite avoid the 30-night cap?

Yes. Hosted rentals where you remain in another bedroom face no annual night cap under Title 22.140.290, only the standard primary-residence and permit requirements.

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