Unincorporated King County does not impose a rental-night cap on short-term rentals. Washington State does not preempt local STR rules, but King County has not adopted a cap. Seattle and some cities have their own caps.
As of this writing, unincorporated King County has not adopted a specific annual cap on the number of nights a short-term rental may be booked. Washington State does not have a statewide preemption or uniform STR framework, so local jurisdictions are free to regulate. King County has largely treated STRs under existing zoning, noise, and occupancy rules rather than through a dedicated short-term rental ordinance with night caps. This contrasts sharply with Seattle, which requires STR operator and platform licensing and caps non-primary-residence rentals, and with some other jurisdictions across the state that have adopted rental-night caps, owner-occupancy requirements, or zoning-district overlays. King County has studied short-term rental impacts in rural and suburban unincorporated areas, and the County Council could adopt future regulations, but standard unlimited-night operation remains allowed so long as the property is used as a short-term rental consistent with zoning (residential use continues) and other KCC requirements. Hosts should verify current rules before purchase or operation because proposed ordinances can change. Platforms such as Airbnb and Vrbo do not enforce a county-specific night cap in unincorporated King County because none exists at the county level.
Because there is no night cap in unincorporated King County, there is no violation for exceeding a nightly rental threshold. Hosts still face enforcement for violations of noise, parking, occupancy, building code, or tax rules that apply regardless of how many nights are booked.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in King County.
See how other cities in King County handle night caps.
See how Seattle's night caps rules stack up against other locations.
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