Rogers does not have a noise rule written specifically for short-term rentals. Guests and hosts are subject to the city's general noise and disturbing-the-peace provisions, which apply citywide to all properties. Repeated noise complaints tied to a vacation rental can be reported to Code Enforcement and can factor into the city's short-term rental enforcement.
There is no dedicated short-term rental noise standard in the Rogers code; instead, noise from a vacation rental is controlled by the city's generally applicable noise and nuisance ordinance, which prohibits loud, disturbing, or unreasonable sound that disrupts neighbors and the peace of the community. These general provisions apply to short-term rental guests exactly as they apply to any resident, covering things like amplified music, parties, and other excessive noise, particularly during nighttime hours. Because Rogers treats short-term rentals as a residential use regulated through business licensing rather than a separate land-use category, the practical noise framework is the same one enforced citywide, with complaints handled by the Rogers Police Department for active disturbances and by Code Enforcement for documented patterns. Visit Rogers guidance frames noise and nuisance behavior as part of being a responsible short-term rental operator, and persistent noise problems linked to a particular rental can support broader code-enforcement action against that property's short-term rental operation. Operators are encouraged to set quiet-hours expectations for guests and to provide a responsible local contact, even though Rogers does not currently mandate a posted noise placard the way some cities with dedicated STR ordinances do. Owners should review the exact noise provisions and any nighttime thresholds in the city's current code, since those sections are periodically updated.
Noise complaints at a short-term rental are enforced under the city's general noise and disturbing-the-peace provisions: the Rogers Police Department can respond to active disturbances, and Code Enforcement can document repeat violations. A pattern of substantiated noise or party complaints tied to a vacation rental can contribute to short-term rental enforcement and the escalating $1,000 / $2,000 / $4,000 fine schedule for short-term rental rule violations.
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