# Short-Term Rental Laws in Pinellas County 2026

> What are the short-term rental rules in Pinellas County for 2026? Local regs, city-by-city breakdown, licensing requirements, and what investors need to know.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/short-term-rental-laws-pinellas-county-2026
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-18
**Updated**: 2026-06-18
**Intent**: investor
**Keywords**: short-term rental laws Pinellas County 2026, Airbnb rules St. Petersburg FL, VRBO regulations Pinellas County, vacation rental license Florida, short-term rental investor Tampa Bay, St. Pete Airbnb ordinance, Pinellas County rental registration


Short-term rental laws in Pinellas County in 2026 operate on two levels: Florida state licensing through the DBPR and local municipal registration requirements that vary city by city. If you're renting a property for fewer than 30 days more than 3 times per year anywhere in Pinellas — whether in St. Pete, Clearwater, Dunedin, or unincorporated county land — you need a state Vacation Rental license and likely a local permit on top of it.

I work with investors all over Pinellas, Hillsborough, and Pasco counties. The short-term rental landscape here changed meaningfully after Hurricane Helene, and the 2026 rules have real teeth compared to what was on the books even two years ago. Here's what you need to know before you buy, list, or expand a short-term rental portfolio in this market.

## Florida State Law: The Foundation Every Investor Starts With

Florida's Vacation Rental statute (F.S. §509.032) governs the baseline. The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) classifies short-term rentals as "transient public lodging establishments" and requires:

- A **DBPR Vacation Rental License** renewed annually (fees typically run $170–$225 per unit depending on property type)
- A state fire and safety inspection
- Compliance with Florida's transient lodging standards including posted evacuation plans and minimum bathroom ratios for occupancy
- Registration with the **Florida Department of Revenue** for sales tax collection (6% state rate)

The 2011 preemption law (F.S. §509.032(7)) limited local governments from passing ordinances that *prohibit* short-term rentals that were already in lawful operation, but it explicitly allows municipalities to regulate frequency, duration, occupancy limits, noise, parking, and registration requirements. In practice, Pinellas cities have used every inch of that regulatory room.

## Pinellas County Unincorporated Areas

In the unincorporated portions of Pinellas County — areas not governed by a specific city — the county enforces its own Short-Term Rental Registration Program:

- **Minimum rental duration: 7 days** in residential zoning districts (R-1, R-2, R-3)
- Annual **county registration required** — certificate number must appear in all advertising (Airbnb listing, VRBO, direct website, everything)
- **Property manager or local contact** must be reachable 24/7 and respond to complaints within one hour
- Maximum **occupancy: 2 persons per bedroom** plus 2 additional guests, with hard caps based on property square footage
- **Tourist Development Tax: 6%** collected on top of the 6% Florida state sales tax — platforms like Airbnb and VRBO remit automatically for bookings made through them; direct bookings require operator self-reporting

Post-Helene (the October 2024 storm that caused significant flooding across coastal Pinellas), the county added a new layer for properties in **FEMA AE and VE flood zones**: active flood insurance documentation and an up-to-date elevation certificate must be on file with the county as part of registration renewal. This catches a lot of investors off guard. If you're buying a rental in [Shore Acres](/neighborhoods/shore-acres), Venetian Isles, or anywhere along the Boca Ciega Bay waterfront, budget time and money for an elevation certificate before you can legally list the property.

## City of St. Petersburg: Vacation Rental Registration Program

St. Petersburg runs a dedicated Vacation Rental Registration Program administered through the City's One Stop. Key requirements as of June 2026:

- **Annual permit required** — base fee currently $157 for single-family, $230 for duplex/multi-unit
- Properties must meet all city zoning setback, parking, and occupancy standards
- **Responsible party** (owner or property manager) must be available 24/7 with response within 60 minutes to neighbor complaints
- **Noise ordinance compliance** is enforced through the rental permit — two substantiated violations in a 12-month period triggers permit revocation
- No minimum stay requirement in most St. Pete residential zones, unlike unincorporated county areas — though this is actively debated at the City Council level and could change

One insider detail: St. Pete's code enforcement has gotten sharper since Helene. Properties in the [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast), [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle), and Shore Acres corridors have seen an uptick in complaint-driven inspections. If your property had any flood damage in 2024 or 2025, city inspectors can ask for proof of permitted repair before renewing a vacation rental certificate.

For a deeper look at the city-specific Airbnb rules, see my dedicated page on [St. Pete Airbnb rules and regulations](/questions/st-pete-airbnb-rules-and-regulations).

## Clearwater, Dunedin, and Other Pinellas Municipalities

Regulations vary meaningfully across Pinellas cities:

| Municipality | Min. Stay | Local Registration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clearwater | 3 days | Yes — annual permit | Clearwater Beach has additional density caps on STRs per block |
| Dunedin | 7 days | Yes | Strong enforcement; 2 violations = permit revoked |
| Largo | 7 days | Yes | Requires HOA approval letter where applicable |
| Tarpon Springs | 3 days | Yes | Historic district properties have additional review |
| Safety Harbor | 7 days | Yes | Among the stricter enforcement regimes in Pinellas |
| St. Pete Beach | 30 days (in most residential zones) | Yes | Effectively prohibits traditional STRs in single-family residential |
| Unincorporated Pinellas | 7 days | Yes — county program | Flood zone cert required for AE/VE properties |

St. Pete Beach deserves a special mention: while state law limits outright bans, St. Pete Beach has pushed minimum stay requirements to 30 days in many of its residential zoning categories, which functionally kills the short-term Airbnb model for those parcels. Always verify zoning and minimum stay rules for the *specific parcel* before making an offer.

## Tax Obligations: Don't Get Surprised at Tax Time

Short-term rental operators in Pinellas County owe three layers of occupancy taxes:

1. **Florida State Sales Tax: 6%** — remitted to the Florida Department of Revenue
2. **Pinellas County Tourist Development Tax (TDT): 6%** — remitted to Pinellas County
3. **Some municipalities add a local discretionary surtax** of 0.5–1% depending on the city

Total effective tax rate on rental revenue: **12–13%** before income tax.

For platform bookings through Airbnb or VRBO, these taxes are collected and remitted by the platform automatically. If you run direct bookings — through your own website, Instagram, or repeat guest relationships — you are responsible for collecting and remitting every dollar. Register with the Florida Department of Revenue before your first direct booking.

## Post-Helene Flood Zone Requirements: The 2026 Change That Catches Investors Off Guard

Hurricane Helene's October 2024 landfall and the flooding it caused across coastal Pinellas reset how the county thinks about vacation rental safety in low-lying areas. The practical changes for 2026:

- **Elevation certificate on file**: Required for all new registrations and renewals in FEMA AE and VE flood zones. If you don't have one, a licensed surveyor runs $500–$900 in most Pinellas zip codes.
- **Active flood insurance documentation**: Proof of a current NFIP or private flood policy must accompany registration renewal. Lapsed policies = lapsed registration.
- **Disclosure to guests**: Properties in AE/VE zones must now include hurricane evacuation zone information in the guest welcome packet per Pinellas County code.

If you're evaluating a waterfront rental property, pair this page with my explainer on [flood insurance costs in St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg) — the premium math has changed significantly post-Helene and it directly affects your net operating income calculation.

## What This Means for Investors Buying in Pinellas Right Now

If you're underwriting a short-term rental acquisition in Pinellas County, here's the due diligence checklist I run through with every investor client:

1. **Verify the parcel's zoning and minimum stay requirement** with the applicable municipality — not just county records
2. **Check FEMA flood zone** via FEMA's Flood Map Service Center; AE or VE designation triggers the new Helene-era requirements
3. **Pull the HOA or condo docs** if applicable — HOA restrictions preempt state preemption laws
4. **Confirm active DBPR license** if buying an existing STR operation — licenses don't transfer automatically
5. **Model the tax drag**: 12–13% off gross rental revenue before any other expenses
6. **Get an elevation certificate quote** before closing if the property is in a flood zone
7. **Talk to a local property manager** about realistic occupancy rates — Pinellas STR occupancy averaged around 64% in 2025 per AirDNA data, down from peak 2022 levels

For a full breakdown of where the numbers work best across Pinellas zip codes, see my page on [cap rates in Pinellas County](/questions/cap-rates-pinellas-county) and [the best Tampa Bay neighborhoods for investors in 2026](/questions/best-tampa-bay-neighborhoods-for-investors-2026).

---

If you already own a property in Pinellas and want to know what it's worth as a potential sale versus continuing to operate it as a rental, I'll pull 3 real MLS comps for your address and text them to you within 24 hours — free, no pressure, no obligation. [Request your free home valuation here.](/contact)

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Does Pinellas County require a license to operate a short-term rental?**

Yes. Florida state law requires all short-term rentals (properties rented more than 3 times per year for periods of less than 30 days) to obtain a Vacation Rental license from the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). Pinellas County municipalities may also layer on local registration, inspection, and zoning requirements on top of the state license.

**Q: Can the City of St. Petersburg ban Airbnb rentals in residential zones?**

Florida's 2011 preemption law (F.S. §509.032) limits how much local governments can restrict short-term rentals — municipalities cannot outright ban them if the property was already operating legally, but they can regulate frequency, duration, density, and registration. St. Petersburg has enacted a local vacation rental registration program requiring annual permits, property manager contact information on file, and compliance with minimum stay and noise ordinances.

**Q: What is the minimum rental period for short-term rentals in Pinellas County unincorporated areas?**

In unincorporated Pinellas County, the minimum rental period for properties in residential zoning districts is 7 days as of 2026. Properties must also be registered with Pinellas County and display a county-issued certificate number in all advertising, including Airbnb and VRBO listings.

**Q: Do short-term rental owners in Pinellas County have to collect tourist development tax?**

Yes. Pinellas County levies a 6% Tourist Development Tax (TDT) on all short-term rental income in addition to Florida's 6% state sales tax. Platforms like Airbnb collect and remit these taxes automatically, but independent operators using direct booking must register with the Florida Department of Revenue and remit taxes themselves.

**Q: How did Hurricane Helene affect short-term rental regulations in Pinellas County?**

Post-Helene, Pinellas County tightened property safety inspection requirements for coastal and flood-zone vacation rentals. Properties in FEMA AE and VE flood zones now require an up-to-date elevation certificate on file with the county, and insurance documentation showing active flood coverage is part of the annual registration renewal process as of 2026.

**Q: Are HOA communities in Pinellas County allowed to prohibit short-term rentals?**

Yes. Florida HOAs and condo associations have the right to restrict or prohibit short-term rentals through their governing documents regardless of state preemption laws. Always review the CC&Rs and condo docs before purchasing with short-term rental intent — I've seen deals fall apart in the final week because the buyer skipped this step.


---

*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
