Unincorporated Stanislaus County sets no annual night cap or maximum-rental-days limit on short-term rentals, because it has no STR ordinance. The only night-related threshold in County rules is the tax definition: occupancy of 30 days or less is a taxable transient stay under Ordinance Code Chapter 4.04.
There is no County rule capping the number of nights a property may be rented per year or limiting bookings to a set number of days, since the unincorporated area has not adopted a vacation-rental ordinance with such limits. The only meaningful night threshold is the dividing line in the Transient Occupancy Tax. The County treats a stay of 30 days or less as a taxable transient occupancy; the TOT exemption form explains that "the transient must pay tax for the first 30 days of occupancy unless there is an agreement in writing between the operator and the occupant providing for a longer period of occupancy," and the quarterly return allows a deduction for rent paid by permanent residents. In other words, 30 days is the boundary between a taxable short stay and a longer-term tenancy, not a ceiling on how many nights a host may offer across a year. Hosts may rent as many nights as the underlying zoning and home-occupation rules allow, while collecting the 8% TOT on each qualifying stay. California imposes no statewide annual night cap, so no day-count limit applies here beyond the 30-day tax boundary.
There is no penalty tied to exceeding an annual night count, because none exists. The compliance risk lies in the tax: misclassifying short transient stays to avoid the 8% Transient Occupancy Tax, or failing to file the required quarterly return, triggers the penalty and interest provisions of Ordinance Code Chapter 4.04 enforced by the Treasurer-Tax Collector.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
stanislaus-county-ca
Stanislaus County uses standard California curb colors. Red means no stopping, standing, or parking (Code Sec. 11.08.010); green means time-limit parking (Co...
stanislaus-county-ca
Stanislaus County Code Chapter 11.12 establishes loading zones by curb color. Yellow curbs allow stopping only to load or unload passengers or freight for th...
stanislaus-county-ca
Stanislaus County's Title 21 zoning ordinance regulates fences by height and visibility, not by a list of approved or prohibited materials for ordinary resid...
stanislaus-county-ca
Beyond height limits, Stanislaus County's Title 21 requires fences in front and corner-side yards to preserve street visibility. Heights are measured from th...
stanislaus-county-ca
Stanislaus County's Title 21 zoning ordinance sets fence heights but contains no separate retaining-wall height section, so retaining walls are governed main...
stanislaus-county-ca
Stanislaus County addresses hoarding-type situations through its kennel-license requirement (Chapter 7.24), public-nuisance and noise provisions (Chapter 7.1...
See how Stanislaus County's night caps rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.