Unincorporated Kings County has no STR-specific registration scheme, but the Transient Occupancy Tax ordinance requires every operator of a 'hotel' (broadly defined to include transient lodging) to register with the Tax Collector within 15 days and post a transient occupancy registration certificate. The certificate is a tax document, not a land-use permit.
The only county-level registration that clearly reaches short-term rental operators in unincorporated Kings County is the Transient Occupancy Tax registration in County Code Chapter 22, Article III. Under Section 22-41, within 15 days after commencing business each operator of any 'hotel' renting occupancy to transients must register the property with the Tax Collector and obtain a transient occupancy registration certificate, which must be 'at all times posted in a conspicuous place on the premises.' The certificate must state the operator's name, the property address, and the issuance date. The code defines 'hotel' broadly in Section 22-37 to include 'any structure, or any portion of any structure, which is occupied or intended or designed for occupancy by transients for dwelling, lodging or sleeping purposes,' which can capture a dwelling rented for stays of 30 days or less. Importantly, the definition excludes 'a private home, or similar facility which is needed by a person who is not regularly engaged in the business of renting such facilities and does so only occasionally and incidentally to his own use thereof' - meaning a genuinely occasional, incidental rental of one's own home may fall outside the tax, while a property run as a regular short-term-rental business does not. The registration certificate is expressly not a permit. Operators should confirm how the County applies these definitions to their specific situation.
An operator who is 'regularly engaged in the business of renting' transient lodging but fails to register and obtain the certificate within 15 days is out of compliance with Section 22-41 and remains liable for collecting and remitting the tax regardless of registration status, plus delinquency penalties and interest under Chapter 22, Article III.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Hanford, CA
Persistent barking or howling that disturbs neighbors violates Hanford's nuisance noise ordinance. Animal noise complaints are handled by the Hanford Police ...
Hanford, CA
Hanford regulates construction noise under HMC Chapter 9.10. While specific hour windows are not enumerated in publicly available code, construction noise th...
Hanford, CA
Hanford Municipal Code Chapter 9.10 (Loud or Annoying Noises) prohibits yelling, shouting, hooting, whistling, or singing in or near residential or noise-sen...
Hanford, CA
Vehicles parked on public streets for more than 72 hours or that are inoperable may be declared abandoned and towed at owner's expense. Inoperable vehicles s...
Hanford, CA
Hanford limits consecutive on-street parking to 72 hours. Vehicles parked beyond 72 hours without moving may be towed. General parking prohibitions include b...
Hanford, CA
Commercial vehicles over 5 tons gross weight may not park on streets or alleys in residential zones, except for active delivery or construction service on th...
See how Hanford'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.