There is no STR registry in unincorporated Stanislaus County. A host instead obtains a business license for a home occupation from the Treasurer-Tax Collector (for locations outside city limits) and registers for the Transient Occupancy Tax, receiving a TOT Certificate number used on the quarterly tax return required by Ordinance Code Chapter 4.04.
Because the County has no dedicated short-term-rental program, registration happens through two existing County systems rather than an STR portal. First, a business operated out of an unincorporated-area location generally needs a County business license; a home-based use is licensed as a Home Occupation, and the Treasurer-Tax Collector issues these licenses and renewals for locations outside city limits. Second, anyone furnishing lodging to transients for compensation must register with the Treasurer-Tax Collector's Business Services Division for the Transient Occupancy Tax. Registration produces a TOT Certificate number, which is entered on the "Quarterly Report of Transient Occupancy Tax as Required by Ordinance 4.04" form. That form is the recurring filing: a return must be filed every quarter even if no tax is due, with periods ending September 30, December 31, March 31 and June 30, and each report due the last day of the following month. Operators must keep all records substantiating the return for not less than three years from the date of payment, and any change of address or ownership must be reported immediately to the Treasurer-Tax Collector. There is no statewide California STR registration, so these County registrations are the operative steps.
Furnishing lodging without registering for the Transient Occupancy Tax, or failing to file the required quarterly return, places the operator out of compliance with Ordinance Code Chapter 4.04. Returns and payment also become due immediately upon cessation of business. Operating a home occupation without the required County business license is a separate compliance issue handled by the Treasurer-Tax Collector and Planning.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Stanislaus County uses standard California curb colors. Red means no stopping, standing, or parking (Code Sec. 11.08.010); green means time-limit parking (Co...
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Stanislaus County Code Chapter 11.12 establishes loading zones by curb color. Yellow curbs allow stopping only to load or unload passengers or freight for th...
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Stanislaus County's Title 21 zoning ordinance regulates fences by height and visibility, not by a list of approved or prohibited materials for ordinary resid...
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Beyond height limits, Stanislaus County's Title 21 requires fences in front and corner-side yards to preserve street visibility. Heights are measured from th...
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Stanislaus County's Title 21 zoning ordinance sets fence heights but contains no separate retaining-wall height section, so retaining walls are governed main...
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Stanislaus County addresses hoarding-type situations through its kennel-license requirement (Chapter 7.24), public-nuisance and noise provisions (Chapter 7.1...
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