Rogers has no short-term rental ordinance that imposes parking requirements specific to vacation rentals. Parking is governed by the city's general zoning and Unified Development Code standards for residential dwellings and by ordinary on-street parking rules, since a short-term rental in Rogers is treated as a residential use rather than a separately regulated lodging category.
Because Rogers regulates short-term rentals through business licensing and the lodging tax instead of a dedicated short-term rental ordinance, there is no vacation-rental-specific parking standard (such as a required off-street space per bedroom) in the city's published code. Parking for a short-term rental is therefore governed by the same standards that apply to the underlying residential dwelling under the city's zoning and Unified Development Code (Chapter 14 of the code), along with the general municipal rules governing on-street parking, blocked driveways, and parking on unimproved surfaces. In practice, a single-family home used as a short-term rental is expected to provide the same off-street parking as any home in its district and to keep guest vehicles from creating obstructions, fire-lane blockages, or nuisance conditions on the street. Operators concerned about neighborhood parking complaints should plan to accommodate guest vehicles on the driveway and within code, because parking-related nuisance complaints can be routed to Code Enforcement through the city's CityView portal. Owners should confirm the off-street parking requirement for their specific zoning district with the city's Community Development office, as those requirements are set in the zoning code rather than in a short-term rental ordinance.
Parking violations at a short-term rental are handled under the city's general parking and nuisance provisions rather than a short-term-rental parking ordinance: vehicles blocking driveways, fire lanes, sidewalks, or parked in violation of district standards can be cited through Code Enforcement. Repeated parking-related nuisance complaints tied to a rental can contribute to broader short-term rental enforcement, which carries the $1,000 / $2,000 / $4,000 escalating fine schedule.
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