San Diego’s Short-Term Rental Ordinance, One Year in

Since enacting a spate of regulations on short-term rentals, the city has removed over 7,000 illegal listings from online platforms.

2 minute read

July 23, 2024, 11:00 AM PDT

By Diana Ionescu @aworkoffiction


Dense neighborhood of homes on a hillside on the water in San Diego, California.

jonbilous / Adobe Stock

A year after San Diego began requiring licenses for short-term rentals, the city says it has removed over 7,000 illegal listings from online platforms. 

According to an article by Lori Weisberg and Roxana Popescu in The San Diego Union-Tribune, “Among the almost 1,800 cases the city has processed, there were nearly 500 unlicensed rentals, more than 400 units that didn’t post a host’s contact information so it was visible to the public, and dozens more instances where hosts were unresponsive to complaints about noise.”

Last year’s ordinance was the city’s first attempt to regulate rentals under 30 days. It caps licenses at one per person and citywideSTRs at 6,592. “Current regulations allow just one license per person, plus a citywide cap of 6,592 licenses for the rental of entire homes for at least 90 days out of the year. Since May of last year, the city has issued more than 5,800 two-year licenses – at a cost of $1,000 each – for whole-home rentals throughout the city.”

Most owners have complied with regulations, and the city only assessed six $1,000 fines. “Revenue to the city from license and application fees has generated more than $7.5 million as of June 30, which so far has more than covered program enforcement costs of over $6.7 million.”

While the city relied on an external analyst to identify non-compliant listings over the last year, the new budget doesn’t include funding for the company. The city plans to rely on STR platforms to self-report listings, which could reduce the effectiveness of the program.

City officials are meeting to discuss potential changes to the program, acknowledging that some owners have gone to unexpected lengths to subvert the rules and operate multiple rentals.

Sunday, July 21, 2024 in The San Diego Union-Tribune

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