Miami Beach, Florida
To list your property with us, Miami Beach requires that you have a business tax receipt and a resort tax registration certificate, and display the numbers corresponding with both of these documents in your listing. You must also comply with ADA, Florida Fire Prevention Code, and Florida Business Code. Written authorisation from the condo association is required if applicable. For more information, click here.
Sunny Isles Beach, Florida
To list your property with us, Sunny Isles Beach requires that you obtain a license from the City and comply with the City’s short-term rental law. For more information on this, click here.
Miami-Dade County (unincorporated portions only)
To list your property with us, Miami-Dade County requires that you obtain a Certificate of Use from the County and comply with additional requirements. We encourage you to review the County’s requirements for short-term rentals, and apply for a Certificate of Use (information here). Among the County’s requirements for short-term rentals are specifications regarding maximum occupancy, residency, providing notice of local laws to travellers, providing notice to home-owners associations, parking, avoiding renting to sex offenders, and swimming pool safety.
Seattle, Washington
To list your property with us, the City of Seattle requires that you collect and remit applicable taxes and comply with the City’s short-term rental law. For more information on both, click here.
Portland, Oregon
To list your property with us, you should review the state and local laws that may apply. You may be required to obtain a short-term rental permit, undergo a safety inspection on the property, and notify your neighbours about the existence of the rental property. Find out which permit you may need and learn more about Portland’s short-term vacation rental regulations here and here. Our Certificate of Authority to Collect Transient Lodgings Tax can be found here.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts law requires us to notify you that you must comply with all applicable municipal, state and federal laws including, but not limited to, the collection and remittance of required excises. Additionally, please be aware that your standard homeowners or landlord insurance may not cover property damage or bodily injury to a third-party arising from your short-term rental.
St. Paul, Minnesota
Under St. Paul’s ordinance regulating short-term rentals, individuals offering property for short-term rental on sites like ours must obtain a license from the City and comply with additional requirements. We encourage you to review the City’s requirements for short-term rentals, set forth here and here, and apply for a license here.
Santa Fe, New Mexico
To list your property with us, you should review the state and local laws that may apply. Rentals for fewer than 30 days in Santa Fe, New Mexico may be subject to Section 14-6.2 of the City’s Land Use Development Code. The regulations set out requirements for renting residential units in the City. Those renting residential units may be required obtain a permit or register their unit with the City. The Code imposes other requirements relating to the number of guests allowed to stay in your property; parking, noise, and compliance with the City’s health, safety, and environmental codes. You may be required to collect and remit to the City all applicable local, state, and federal taxes, including the City’s Lodgers’ Tax. You can learn more about the City’s short term rental laws, and obtain the application for a short term rental permit here.
Santa Monica, California
Under Santa Monica’s laws regulating short-term rentals, to engage in short-term rentals homeowners must obtain a license from the City. We will allow any short-term rental to be listed so long as it is licensed with the City if Santa Monica. You can find more information on the City’s licensing requirements here. There are no fees to register or obtain a license.
Tuolumne County, California
To list your property with us, you should review the state and local laws that may apply. Rentals for fewer than 30 days in unincorporated areas of Tuolumne County, California may be subject to the County’s Transient Occupancy Tax. You may be required to register your rental unit with the county tax collector, obtain a transient occupancy registration certificate, and follow other notification and record-keeping requirements. Learn more about the County’s transient occupancy tax.
Utah
To list your property with us, you should review the state and local laws that may apply. Rentals for fewer than 30 days in Utah may be subject to a transient room tax up to 4.25% imposed by your county. The Utah State Tax Commission publishes a list of the counties that impose a transient room tax and the current rate here. More information about the transient room tax is available at the Utah State Tax Commission’s website here.