Santa Cruz County does not require a vacation rental to be the owner's primary residence; a Non-Hosted Rental under SCCC 13.10.694 is explicitly a whole home the owner does not occupy. Instead, the County controls non-owner-occupied rentals through countywide caps, designated-area caps, a 20% per-block density limit, and a one-permit-per-owner rule.
Unlike some jurisdictions, unincorporated Santa Cruz County allows non-owner-occupied short-term rentals rather than restricting permits to a host's primary home. SCCC 13.10.694 defines a Vacation (Non-Hosted) Rental as a single-family dwelling, duplex, or triplex where the owner/operator does not occupy the unit while it is rented and only the renter and guests occupy it. So an investment property qualifies. What the County uses instead of a primary-residence mandate is a system of caps and spacing. The County limits permits to one short-term rental per person or entity, and Non-Hosted and Hosted permits cannot exist on the same property at the same time. It sets numeric caps in three Designated Areas: the Live Oak Designated Area (LODA), the Seacliff/Aptos/La Selva Beach Designated Area (SALSDA), and the Davenport/Swanton Designated Area (DASDA), along with a countywide cap outside those areas. Within any designated area, no new vacation rental is approved if vacation and hosted rentals on the same block reach 20 percent or more of the block's residential parcels, measured against a Board-adopted Block Map. By contrast, a Hosted Rental under SCCC 13.10.690 requires the owner or a long-term resident to occupy one legal bedroom on site, so hosted rentals are inherently owner-present. Non-Hosted vacation rentals carry no such on-site requirement, but they are the category subject to the strictest caps.
Holding more than one short-term rental permit per person or entity, holding both a Non-Hosted and a Hosted permit on the same parcel, or seeking a new vacation rental where it would push a block past the 20% density threshold, all conflict with SCCC 13.10.694 and will result in denial, with continued unpermitted operation subject to revocation and enforcement.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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See how Santa Cruz's primary-residence-only rule rules stack up against other locations.
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