Kings County does not require an on-site host or a designated local contact for short-term rentals, because it has no STR ordinance. Hosted and unhosted (whole-home) rentals are both allowed under general rules, with no mandated 24-hour responsible-person or response-time requirement for unincorporated areas.
Many California STR ordinances require either an on-site host or a designated local contact who can respond to problems within a set time. Kings County has adopted no such requirement for its unincorporated areas because it has no short-term rental ordinance. There is no county rule mandating that the host be present during a guest's stay, that a property manager live nearby, or that the operator provide a 24-hour emergency contact who responds within a fixed number of minutes. The only operator-identification requirement at the county level is in the Transient Occupancy Tax registration: under Section 22-41, the operator must register with the Tax Collector and post a certificate showing the operator's name and the property address - but this is for tax administration, not a guest-response or host-presence mandate, and the code states the certificate 'does not constitute a permit.' As a practical matter, because noise, nuisance, and disturbance issues are handled through general county and state channels (Sheriff response and nuisance abatement), operators benefit from having a reachable local contact even though none is legally required. Should the County adopt an STR ordinance in the future, a local-contact requirement is a common feature; as of mid-2026 it has not. Confirm current requirements with the County, as rules can change.
No host-presence or local-contact violation exists because the County imposes no such requirement. The only related county obligation is accurate TOT operator registration under Section 22-41; non-registration is enforced under the tax ordinance, not a host-presence rule.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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