Rogers has not adopted a short-term rental ordinance that sets a guest-per-bedroom or maximum-occupancy cap specific to vacation rentals. Occupancy is governed instead by the city's general fire and life-safety code, enforced through the Certificate of Occupancy inspection by the Community Risk Reduction Division, plus building-code limits that apply to any dwelling.
Unlike some Arkansas cities (for example, Fayetteville's tiered short-term rental classifications), Rogers does not have a dedicated short-term rental ordinance that establishes a numerical occupancy formula such as two guests per bedroom plus two. Because Rogers regulates vacation rentals through the business-license and Certificate of Occupancy process rather than a standalone STR chapter, the controlling occupancy constraints are the general fire and life-safety standards that the Community Risk Reduction Division enforces at the required Certificate of Occupancy inspection, together with the underlying building and property-maintenance codes that apply to any residential dwelling. Those general codes limit occupancy based on factors like the number and size of sleeping rooms, egress, and life-safety conditions rather than a short-term-rental-specific headcount. No publicly published Rogers ordinance section sets a vacation-rental-specific maximum occupancy, so operators should treat the inspection findings and standard residential occupancy rules as the governing limit and confirm the specifics with the Community Risk Reduction Division. This is an area where Rogers has chosen a lighter regulatory touch than cities that adopted comprehensive STR ordinances; that posture could change if the city later enacts dedicated short-term rental regulations.
Exceeding the safe occupancy established at the Certificate of Occupancy inspection, or violating fire and life-safety standards (blocked egress, inadequate smoke detection, overcrowding), can result in correction orders or citations from the Community Risk Reduction Division and can jeopardize the business license. General short-term rental rule violations carry the city's $1,000 / $2,000 / $4,000 escalating fine schedule.
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