STR Rule Watch

Can I Airbnb in San Diego, CA? (2026)

Yes β€” with a permitPermit required

Short-term rentals (under one month) are legal in San Diego but every host needs a Short-Term Residential Occupancy (STRO) license, issued in four tiers; a whole-home Tier 3 license costs $1,170 total ($41 application + $1,129 license, valid two years), while part-time and home-share tiers cost $226-$317. The biggest restriction is that each host may hold only one license and operate only one dwelling unit citywide, and whole-home licenses are capped (1% of the city's housing stock for Tier 3; Mission Beach Tier 4 is fully allocated with a frozen waitlist). Guests also pay 11.75%-13.75% transient occupancy tax depending on zone. Always confirm current requirements with the city before operating.

What’s required: a Short-Term Residential Occupancy (STRO) License (Tiers 1-4) ($1,170) is required; occupancy taxes apply; renew biennial.

Check a specific address

Rules can vary by zone and parcel. Resolve any California street address to its jurisdiction and see the verified rules that apply.

Related

Verified July 10, 2026. Informational only β€” not legal, tax, or financial advice. Also check HOA/condo rules and your lease, which can prohibit short-term rentals even where the city allows them.