nightlydata

Regulation tracker

Per-city short-term rental rules with dated official sources. Updated when the rule actually changes, not on a marketing cadence.

Australia

Canada

Portugal

United Kingdom

United States

Denver

Colorado
Licence required

Short-Term Rental (STR) license required from the Denver Department of Excise and Licenses for any residential dwelling unit available for rent for one to 29 days. The STR must be the licensee's primary residence, defined per the Denver ordinance as 'the place where a person's habitation is fixed for the term of the license and is the person's usual place of return.' A person may have only one primary residence. Rentals of 30 or more consecutive days fall outside the STR regime and require a residential rental property license instead. The primary-residence requirement effectively excludes investor-only / non-owner-occupied STR operations in Denver.

Verified Jun 2026

Honolulu

Hawaii
Licence required

Short-term rentals are defined as lodging accommodations for less than 30 consecutive days. Two STR types are permitted: Bed & Breakfast (B&B) and Transient Vacation Unit (TVU). STRs are restricted to resort-zoned areas and specific apartment-zoned areas designated by City Council, per the Land Use Ordinance as amended by Ordinance 22-7 (and subsequent ordinances 24-14, 25-2 / Bill 64, and 25-52, which updated permitted-zone maps and definitions).

Verified Jun 2026

New Orleans

Louisiana
Licence required

Short-term rentals are regulated by the City of New Orleans under two license categories administered by the Department of Safety and Permits / Short Term Rental Administration: Non-Commercial Short Term Rental (NSTR) for residential / owner-operated properties, and Commercial Short Term Rental (CSTR) for commercial operations, which require zoning approval via a conditional use permit. STR licenses are non-transferrable.

Verified Jun 2026

San Diego

California
Licence required

City of San Diego Short-Term Residential Occupancy (STRO) Ordinance, administered by the Office of the City Treasurer. An STRO license is required to operate any dwelling rental of less than one month within the City of San Diego; the licensing requirement became enforceable on 2023-05-01. The ordinance establishes four tiers: Tier 1 (Part-Time, maximum 20 days per calendar year, host need not be present); Tier 2 (Home Sharing, more than 20 days per year, host resides onsite, host absences capped at 90 days per calendar year); Tier 3 (Whole Home, citywide except Mission Beach, more than 20 days per year without host onsite, minimum 90-day annual utilization to maintain the license); Tier 4 (Mission Beach Whole Home, more than 20 days per year, minimum 90-day annual utilization, application period currently closed).

Verified Jun 2026