Ordinance No. 927 does NOT require a short-term rental to be the owner's primary residence. Non-owner-occupied (unhosted) whole-home rentals are allowed countywide. Instead, the County limits investor concentration in Idyllwild and Wine Country through ownership caps, density spacing, and overall rental caps.
Unlike some California jurisdictions, Riverside County Ordinance No. 927 contains no primary-residence or owner-occupancy requirement for short-term rentals in unincorporated areas. A short-term rental is defined broadly in Section 4 as any legal privately owned residential dwelling-including detached homes, attached units, condominiums, duplexes, mobile and manufactured homes on permanent foundations, and qualifying ADUs-rented for fewer than 30 days. Owners may operate whole-home, non-owner-occupied rentals. The ordinance does recognize 'Hosted Stays,' where the owner occupies the unit during the rental, and permits multiple booking transactions for a hosted stay (up to five rooms), but hosting is an option, not a mandate. Rather than requiring primary residency, the County controls investor saturation in its two most impacted communities. In both Idyllwild (including Pine Cove) and Temecula Valley Wine Country, no owner or owner entity may hold more than two STR certificates simultaneously (Sections 9 and 10), subject to a grandfather exception for owners who already held more. These same areas have hard caps-no more than 500 certificates in Idyllwild (about 14% of single-family units), 114 in the Winery District, 8 in the Equestrian District, and 105 in the Residential District of Wine Country-plus density spacing of 500 feet between rentals in Wine Country and 150 feet in Idyllwild. Eligible properties are selected through a tiered application and lottery process under Section 11.
There is no primary-residence violation because none is required. However, exceeding the two-certificate ownership cap in Idyllwild or Wine Country, or operating within a prohibited density radius, is grounds for certificate denial. False ownership disclosures on the application are an enumerated violation under Section 14.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Palm Springs, CA
Palm Springs restricts amplified music at residential properties, vacation rentals, and outdoor spaces under PSMC Ch. 11.74 with strict nighttime decibel lim...
Palm Springs, CA
Palm Springs enforces California Vehicle Code §22651 and §22669 and Palm Springs Municipal Code Chapter 12 to remove abandoned vehicles from streets and priv...
Palm Springs, CA
Palm Springs does not impose a citywide ban on overnight on-street parking in residential neighborhoods, but the 72-hour stationary limit under Palm Springs ...
Palm Springs, CA
Palm Springs requires a building permit and engineered plans for any retaining wall over 4 feet in height (measured from the bottom of the footing to the top...
Palm Springs, CA
Palm Springs defers to California Civil Code §841 (Good Neighbor Fence Act) for shared boundary fences. Adjoining property owners are presumed to benefit equ...
Palm Springs, CA
Palm Springs enforces California Building Code Appendix V and Health & Safety Code §115920–115929 (the Swimming Pool Safety Act) requiring barriers at least ...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Riverside County.
See how other cities in Riverside County handle primary-residence-only rule.
See how Palm Springs's primary-residence-only rule rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.