STR Rule Watch

Las Vegas vs New Orleans: Short-Term Rental Rules Compared (2026)

Las Vegas is currently "primary residence only" while New Orleans is "restricted". The bigger difference is eligibility: Las Vegas restricts rentals to the host's own residence, while New Orleans permits dedicated rentals. Full verified details for both markets below โ€” always confirm current requirements with each jurisdiction.

Las Vegas, NV Primary residence onlyNew Orleans, LA Restricted

Side by side

RuleLas Vegas, NVNew Orleans, LA
Legal statusPrimary residence onlyRestricted
Permit requiredYesYes
Permit nameShort-Term Residential Rental business license (with Conditional Use Verification)Non-Commercial Short-Term Rental (NSTR) Owner Permit (residential zones); Commercial Short-Term Rental (CSTR) Owner Permit (commercial/mixed-use zones); plus a separate STR Operator Permit
Permit fee$500$500
RenewalAnnualAnnual
Primary residence onlyYesNo
Owner occupancy requiredYesNo
Night cap / yearNone foundNone found
Minimum stay1 night(s)None found
Total occupancy taxes~13%~16.75%
Last verifiedJuly 10, 2026July 10, 2026

Compare guest tax loads

Switch between the two markets to see itemized occupancy taxes on the same stay.

Gross rent$450.00
Combined transient lodging (room) tax -- city of Las Vegas (13%)ยท collection varies$58.50
Total tax (13%)$58.50
Guest pays$508.50

Estimate only. Platform collection varies by listing site and agreement; verify rates with the taxing authorities.

Las Vegas, NV

The city of Las Vegas allows short-term rentals (stays under 31 consecutive days) only with a Short-Term Residential Rental business license, which requires a free Conditional Use Verification, a Code Enforcement home inspection, and a $500 annual license fee. The biggest restriction is that the home must be the owner's primary residence and 'owner-occupied' throughout every rental period -- the owner must actually reside and sleep on site while guests stay -- and the unit may have no more than three bedrooms, must sit at least 660 feet from any other short-term rental and 2,500 feet from a resort hotel, and is barred from apartment buildings and several master-planned areas such as Summerlin. Unlicensed operators face civil fines of $1,000 to $10,000 per violation, assessable per day. Always confirm current requirements with the city before operating.

Full Las Vegasrules, playbook & sources โ†’

New Orleans, LA

Short-term rentals are legal in New Orleans only with a city STR Owner permit plus a separate Operator permit: residential properties need a Non-Commercial (NSTR) owner permit ($500/yr plus $50 application fee), awarded by quarterly lottery with a hard cap of one NSTR or B&B per city square, and a permitted operator must live on site during every guest stay. STRs are banned in most of the French Quarter and in the Garden District, each owner may hold only one STR permit, and the city has accepted no new Commercial (CSTR) applications since June 8, 2023; since June 2025 platforms like Airbnb must verify a valid city permit before allowing bookings. Always confirm current requirements with the city before operating.

Full New Orleansrules, playbook & sources โ†’

Informational only โ€” not legal, tax, or financial advice. Rules change frequently in both markets; verify current requirements with each jurisdiction before operating.

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