Unincorporated Solano County does not publish an annual cap on the number of nights a Vacation House Rental may operate in its primary VHR program materials. VHRs are defined by stay length (30 days or less per booking) and governed by zoning, fire-zone, and permit conditions rather than a fixed yearly night limit.
Solano County's short-term rental framework is keyed to per-stay length, not to a yearly night cap. Short-term lodging is defined as transient occupancy for a period of 30 consecutive calendar days or less, and a Vacation House Rental is a dwelling offered or used for that transient occupancy without a resident family present. In the County's published VHR program pages, FAQ, and application materials reviewed here, the County's binding constraints are the permit type (Minor Use Permit for a VHR), the zoning district (the use must be allowed where the property sits), fire-hazard-zone limits (not allowed in Very High FHSZ; High FHSZ must meet Section 28.75.30(A)(7)(b)), occupancy (2 per bedroom + 2, max 10), and the operating-permit conditions - not a stated maximum number of rentable nights per year. The County's VHR FAQ does address a minimum-stay question, indicating the program speaks to minimum booking length rather than an annual ceiling. Because we did not see a numeric annual night cap in the County's primary sources, we do not assert one; operators should confirm any stay-length conditions printed on their issued Minor Use Permit. Note that the annually renewed VHR operating permit is an administrative renewal cycle, not a cap on rentable nights.
Without a published annual night cap, the enforceable limits are per-stay length (over-30-day stays fall outside the STR/TOT framework) and the conditions on the issued permit; violating those conditions can trigger enforcement.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Fairfield, CA
Residential pools in Fairfield must be enclosed by a barrier between 60 and 72 inches tall with self-closing, self-latching gates that open away from the poo...
Fairfield, CA
Fairfield does not prescribe specific residential fence materials beyond prohibiting barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fencing in residential zones. C...
Fairfield, CA
Fairfield follows California Civil Code §841, the Good Neighbor Fence Law: adjoining owners are presumed to share equally in the cost of building, maintainin...
Fairfield, CA
Fairfield requires a building permit for fences and freestanding walls over 7 feet tall and for retaining walls over 4 feet measured from the bottom of the f...
Fairfield, CA
Fairfield Municipal Code Section 25.30 caps front-yard fences at 42 inches within 15 feet of the front property line and 7 feet beyond that. Street side yard...
Fairfield, CA
Fairfield Municipal Code does not set a hard numeric cap on dogs or cats per household. Animals must be licensed, vaccinated, and kept in conditions that do ...
See how Fairfield'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.