Bellflower has no short-term rental parking standard because it does not permit residential STRs. Parking is governed by the city's general off-street parking requirements in Chapter 17.88, which set spaces by use - for example, hotels and motels in the commercial zone require parking based on floor area. Residential dwellings must meet their own zone's off-street parking minimums.
Cities that license short-term rentals often add a parking condition (such as one off-street space per bedroom rented) to keep guest cars off the street. Bellflower has no STR-specific parking rule because it does not authorize residential short-term rentals. Instead, off-street parking in Bellflower is governed by Chapter 17.88 of the Municipal Code, the citywide Off-Street Parking Requirements, which assign required spaces by land use. For transient lodging, which Bellflower treats as a commercial hotel/motel use in the General Commercial (C-G) zone, the code uses a floor-area standard - the parking requirement is calculated on the building's floor space rather than on a per-listing or per-bedroom basis. Residential properties, by contrast, must provide the off-street parking required for dwellings in their applicable residential zone (R-1, R-2, or R-3) and any covered-parking or garage requirements that come with new construction or additions. Because a home cannot lawfully be used as a short-term rental in a residential zone, there is no separate guest-parking obligation layered on top of the residential standard. Owners building or converting lodging in a commercial zone should confirm the exact parking ratio and any deck or amenity requirements with the Planning Division, since hotel/motel projects are subject to development standards and discretionary review.
There is no STR parking standard to cite. Parking enforcement in Bellflower runs through zoning compliance: failing to provide the required off-street parking for a use is a zoning violation, and operating an unpermitted lodging use in a residential zone is itself a violation regardless of parking. On-street parking and vehicle nuisances are separately enforced under the city's traffic and code provisions.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Under California SB 1383, the City of Bellflower requires residents and businesses to separate organic waste - food scraps and yard/green waste - into organi...
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Bellflower allows artificial turf, but through a City Council-authorized pilot program. Municipal Code Section 17.16.200(C) lets the Director of Planning app...
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Bellflower does not mandate native plants by species, but its zoning code requires water-efficient landscaping. Section 17.16.200 (Single-Family Zone) direct...
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Bellflower's municipal code does not prohibit residential rainwater harvesting, and no City rain-barrel permit requirement was found for simple rooftop barre...
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Bellflower's Municipal Code Chapter 13.16 (Water Conservation Measures) bans watering lawns or landscaping between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m., limits irrigation to n...
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Bellflower controls weeds and overgrowth through its Public Nuisances ordinance, Municipal Code Chapter 8.36, rather than a separate weed-abatement title. Se...
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