Madera County does not limit short-term rentals to an owner's primary residence. The County's tax framework treats all qualifying operators the same, and the proposed STVR Ordinance described occupancy, parking, noise and fire standards rather than a primary-residence restriction.
Some California jurisdictions only allow short-term rentals at the owner's primary residence or distinguish 'hosted' from 'non-hosted' rentals. Madera County's published framework does not impose such a primary-residence requirement. On the tax side, the County registers any operator who rents accommodations for 30 days or less in the unincorporated areas and applies the same TOT and TBID obligations whether or not the owner lives on site; nothing in the registration program limits rentals to a primary home. On the land-use side, the proposed Short-Term Vacation Rental Ordinance was described in County materials and Planning Commission coverage in terms of operational standards - a non-transferable STVR permit, occupancy limits tied to unit size, on-site parking, quiet hours and noise limits, trash management, and fire-code and defensible-space compliance - not as a primary-residence-only program. This is consistent with the County's mountain-tourism economy, where many vacation rentals around Bass Lake, Oakhurst and Yosemite Lakes are second homes and dedicated rental cabins. Because the STVR Ordinance was still in draft as of mid-2026, operators should verify with the Planning Division that the adopted version does not add residency conditions; but no primary-residence restriction had been published for the unincorporated county.
There is no primary-residence violation to enforce because the County does not require it. Operators must still meet the tax-registration rules and, once adopted, the STVR permit's operational standards.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Madera County Animal Services investigates animal cruelty and neglect; warning signs include caged animals with little room, lack of weather protection, and ...
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Madera County Animal Services materials do not publish a specific wildlife-feeding ban for unincorporated areas. In Madera's foothills and Sierra communities...
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Backyard composting of yard and food scraps is allowed in unincorporated Madera County if it does not create odor or vector nuisances. Statewide, California'...
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Madera County does not publish a countywide ban on artificial turf for the unincorporated areas. California Civil Code § 4735 protects a homeowner's right to...
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Native and drought-tolerant landscaping is encouraged in unincorporated Madera County, and California law protects a homeowner's right to install it. Governm...
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Capturing rooftop rainwater for landscape use is broadly allowed in unincorporated Madera County. California's Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (Water Code § 10...
See how Madera County's primary-residence-only rule rules stack up against other locations.
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