Unincorporated Solano County offers both hosted and non-hosted short-term rentals. A Hosted Rental offers a single guest room (Administrative Permit, LUR 28.72.40(B)(5)) and a Bed and Breakfast Inn or Agricultural Homestay is owner-occupied, while a Vacation House Rental is defined as transient occupancy without a resident family present - so on-site host presence is not required for a VHR.
Solano County's short-term lodging structure is built around whether a resident family is present, which is exactly the host-presence question. The County's category definitions divide dwellings occupied by a resident family from those not occupied by one. In the hosted/owner-occupied tier: a Hosted Rental offers a single guest room for transient occupancy, with or without meals (the single-room bed and breakfast concept), authorized by an Administrative Permit under Land Use Regulation 28.72.40(B)(5); a Bed and Breakfast Inn and an Agricultural Homestay are owner-occupied properties renting rooms to a small number of guests. In the non-hosted tier: a Vacation House Rental is 'a dwelling that is offered or used for transient occupancy without a resident family present,' which means the host is not required to be on-site during the stay; the VHR is instead authorized through a Minor Use Permit with conditions. So Solano County does not impose a single countywide host-presence mandate - it lets operators choose a hosted product (host present) or a non-hosted VHR (host absent), each with its own permit. Operators should still provide a responsible local contact and the County-required Good Neighbor materials so complaints can be addressed promptly.
There is no general violation for the host being absent at a permitted VHR; enforcement focuses on operating the wrong category for the situation, lacking the correct permit, or failing to respond to guest-conduct complaints.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Solano County, CA
Solano County allows standard fence materials for residential lots without a general material ban. Section 28.94.I requires a solid wall or fence approved by...
Solano County, CA
Beyond height, Solano County's Zoning Code requires screening fences in certain situations. Section 28.94.I requires a minimum six-foot-high solid wall or fe...
Solano County, CA
In unincorporated Solano County, retaining walls not over 4 feet in height, measured from the bottom of the footing to the top of the wall, are exempt from a...
Solano County, CA
Solano County's Zoning Code (Chapter 28) sets fence height and placement, but cost-sharing and disputes over boundary fences are governed by California Civil...
Solano County, CA
Solano County Code Chapter 4 has no provision using the term 'hoarding,' but it addresses the underlying conditions: it bars keeping animals in numbers or co...
Solano County, CA
Solano County Code Chapter 4 contains no general ordinance prohibiting the feeding of wild animals such as deer, coyotes, or raccoons in unincorporated areas...
See how Solano County's host presence rule rules stack up against other locations.
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