Conroe imposes no minimum or maximum night caps on short-term rentals. Stays of fewer than 30 consecutive days simply trigger Hotel Occupancy Tax under Conroe Code Ch. 62 and Tex. Tax Code Ch. 156/351.
Neither the City of Conroe nor Montgomery County limits the number of nights a property may be rented short-term per year, and there is no minimum-stay requirement. The only night-related threshold is the tax definition: any rental of a sleeping room for fewer than 30 consecutive days is taxable. Stays of 30 days or longer are exempt from both city and state HOT and are generally treated as long-term tenancies under Texas Property Code Ch. 92. Texas has no statewide STR preemption setting night caps, leaving the field open to future local action by Conroe.
There is nothing to violate on night counts; however, mischaracterizing taxable stays under 30 days as exempt long-term rentals can trigger HOT audit penalties.
See how Conroe's night caps rules stack up against other locations.
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