To operate a short-term rental in unincorporated Inyo County, an owner must obtain a Planning Department permit under Chapter 18.73 and separately register with the Inyo County Treasurer-Tax Collector to collect and remit Transient Occupancy Tax. Each permit requires an on-parcel host and current emergency-contact information.
Registration in unincorporated Inyo County has two parts. First, the operator obtains a short-term rental permit from the Planning Department under County Code Chapter 18.73, completing the application, a site/parking plan, house rules, and the Neighborhood Agreement process. Second, the operator must register with the Inyo County Treasurer-Tax Collector to collect and pay Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT); the County treats this TOT registration as part of the application materials. Because the ordinance allows only hosted rentals, each registered short-term rental must have an owner or designated representative residing on the parcel during stays. Under Section 18.73.030(D), each short-term rental must have an owner or designated representative readily available to handle questions or complaints during all short-term rental activities, and any change to that contact information must immediately be provided in writing to the Inyo County Planning Department, to neighboring properties within 300 feet, and on any required postings. Failure to keep contact information current is itself an enforceable violation, as documented in the County's 2025 revocation proceedings. After approval, the County notifies property owners within 300 feet of the rental and provides the host's emergency contact. The Treasurer-Tax Collector requires quarterly TOT returns, and failure to remit the tax is a misdemeanor under county code.
Operating without both the Planning permit and TOT registration is a violation. Failing to update the host/representative contact information with the County and neighbors within 300 feet violates Section 18.73.030(D) and can contribute to permit revocation. Not remitting collected TOT is a misdemeanor.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Bishop, CA
Noise regulation in Bishop, CA β the only incorporated city in Inyo County β falls under Title 9 (Public Peace, Morals and Welfare) of the Bishop Municipal C...
Inyo County, CA
Backyard composting is allowed. California's SB 1383 (effective 2022) requires residents to separate organic waste β food scraps and yard trimmings β from tr...
Inyo County, CA
Inyo County has no ordinance banning or restricting artificial turf on private property. Synthetic turf is a recognized way to meet state water-efficiency go...
Inyo County, CA
Inyo County's adopted Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (MWELO) requires new and rehabilitated landscapes to favor low-water plants, bans invasive species,...
Inyo County, CA
Rainwater harvesting is legal and encouraged. Under California's Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (AB 1750), landowners may install rain barrels and rooftop cap...
Inyo County, CA
Day-to-day outdoor watering rules in Inyo County come from California state law, not a county ordinance. Statewide rules ban wasteful uses (hosing pavement, ...
See how Bishop's registration rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.