Santa Clara County zoning enforcement under Title A escalates penalties for repeated STR violations. Cities use formal strike systems suspending or revoking permits after multiple substantiated complaints.
Repeat-violator or 'strike' systems impose escalating consequences after multiple substantiated short-term rental violations. Santa Clara County code enforcement under Title A applies progressive fines (typically $100, $200, $500 per recurrence) and may seek abatement orders for repeated zoning violations from non-compliant unincorporated STRs. Cities operate formal strike systems: San Jose's program suspends permits after three substantiated complaints in 12 months; Palo Alto can revoke registration after pattern violations including noise, occupancy, or unpermitted operation. Strikes reset annually in some programs but stay on record permanently in others. Platforms (Airbnb, VRBO) cooperate via data-sharing agreements with major cities to delist suspended listings.
Three substantiated violations within 12 months commonly trigger permit suspension. Continued operation after suspension risks daily fines up to $1,000, property liens, and platform delisting.
Santa Clara County, CA
California state law and city ordinances impose joint liability on STR hosts and platforms like Airbnb. Platforms must collect TOT, verify permits, and remov...
Santa Clara County, CA
Short-term rentals in Santa Clara County must follow the noise ordinance: 45 dBA nighttime (10pm-7am), 55 dBA daytime at property lines. Excessive guest nois...
Santa Clara County, CA
Short-term rentals in unincorporated Santa Clara County require TOT registration with the County Department of Tax and Collections. No separate STR permit sy...
See how Santa Clara County's repeat violator strikes rules stack up against other locations.
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