No. Seminole County does not impose minimum-night or maximum-night limits, and Florida law forbids it: FS 509.032(7)(b) bars local governments from regulating the duration or frequency of vacation rentals.
Seminole County's ordinance intentionally regulates registration, occupancy, parking, and noise rather than how often or how long a home may be rented. FS 509.032(7)(b) provides that a local law, ordinance, or regulation may not prohibit vacation rentals or regulate the duration or frequency of rental of vacation rentals, and the ordinance's recitals acknowledge that 2014 revisions allowed local regulation only of noise, occupancy, parking, and registration. As a result there is no county night-cap, no minimum-stay requirement, and no annual rental-day limit. Any minimum-stay or booking-frequency limit a host encounters would come from a homeowner or condominium association, not from Seminole County.
Not applicable; the County sets no night-cap or minimum-stay rule to enforce. Association covenants, where more restrictive, are enforced privately, not by the County.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Seminole County, FL
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Seminole County, FL
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Seminole County, FL
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See how Seminole County's night caps rules stack up against other locations.
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