# Tampa Bay Short-Term Rental Regulations: Hillsborough & Pinellas

> Airbnb and VRBO rules differ sharply across Tampa Bay. Here's what investors need to know about STR laws in Hillsborough and Pinellas counties in 2026.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/tampa-bay-short-term-rental-regulations-hillsborough-pinellas
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-07-09
**Updated**: 2026-07-09
**Intent**: investor
**Keywords**: short-term rental regulations Tampa Bay, Airbnb rules Hillsborough County, VRBO regulations Pinellas County, STR laws St. Petersburg 2026, Tampa short-term rental permit, Airbnb Tampa 2026, short-term rental investment Tampa Bay


Short-term rental regulations in Tampa Bay are not uniform — Hillsborough and Pinellas counties each have their own licensing frameworks layered on top of Florida state law, and the individual cities within those counties (Tampa, St. Petersburg, Clearwater) add yet another layer. As of mid-2026, operating an Airbnb or VRBO anywhere in the two-county metro requires at minimum a state DBPR registration, a county business tax receipt, and — in most municipalities — a separate city-level STR permit. Penalties for non-compliance range from $500 to $5,000 per violation.

## Florida State Law Sets the Floor

Florida Statute §509.032 is the foundation every Tampa Bay investor needs to understand. Passed and amended through the 2010s, it prohibits local governments from banning STRs outright based purely on their classification as short-term rentals. But — and this is the part investors often miss — municipalities absolutely can regulate STRs through licensing requirements, safety inspections, occupancy caps, noise ordinances, and parking rules. The state sets the floor. Local governments build the ceiling.

At the state level, every STR operator must register with the **Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR)** under a "Vacation Rental" license. The DBPR license runs $50–$100 depending on property type and must be renewed annually. Airbnb and VRBO both display DBPR license numbers on listings, and guests can look them up. No state license = your listing is technically illegal from day one.

Florida also mandates that all STR operators collect and remit:
- **6% Florida state sales tax**
- **County Tourist Development Tax** (varies by county — more below)
- Any applicable local discretionary surtax

Airbnb and VRBO now auto-collect and remit these for marketplace bookings. If you take any direct bookings off-platform, you're responsible for collecting and remitting yourself.

## Pinellas County STR Rules (Unincorporated and City-Level)

Unincorporated Pinellas County — the areas outside city limits, roughly parts of Seminole, Largo outskirts, and coastal communities — permits STRs in most residential zones. You'll need a **Pinellas County Business Tax Receipt** (roughly $30/year) and your DBPR vacation rental license. Properties in unincorporated Pinellas must also meet county safety codes: working smoke detectors in every bedroom, a fire extinguisher on each floor, and posted emergency egress routes.

The real complexity kicks in once you enter a municipality.

**City of St. Petersburg** has one of the more structured STR frameworks in the region. As of 2026:

- A **Short-Term Rental Registration** is required — $150/year, renewable annually.
- A **Business Tax Receipt** is also required from the city.
- STRs must comply with the city's zoning code. Most single-family residential zones (NT-1, NT-2, NT-3) allow STRs, but some overlay districts — particularly around Old Northeast and historic preservation zones — have added review requirements.
- Occupancy is capped at **2 guests per bedroom plus 2**, with a hard maximum of 12 guests per property.
- Quiet hours are enforced: 10 PM to 7 AM on weekdays, 11 PM to 8 AM on weekends.
- The city has an active enforcement hotline. Verified complaints result in inspections within 48 hours.

For context: if you're looking at a 3-bedroom bungalow in [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood), you're capped at 8 guests. That's workable for most leisure travelers but limits group-event bookings.

**Clearwater** has been progressively tightening STR rules since 2022. As of 2026, Clearwater requires a city license, proof of owner registration with DBPR, and an annual inspection. Clearwater Beach properties face additional scrutiny under the city's coastal overlay district — inspectors pay particular attention to parking compliance given how congested beach access already is.

**St. Pete Beach and Treasure Island** — both popular STR markets — have their own municipal rules. St. Pete Beach requires a city vacation rental certificate and limits nightly rentals to a minimum stay of 3 nights in some residential zones. Treasure Island went through a council fight in 2023 over STR density caps; properties there are still subject to annual re-permitting and neighbor notification requirements.

## Hillsborough County STR Rules (Unincorporated and City of Tampa)

Unincorporated Hillsborough County is more permissive than most of Pinellas by default. STRs are allowed in residential zones with a **county vacation rental license** (about $75/year) plus the state DBPR registration. The county doesn't currently impose occupancy caps beyond what's in the state law framework, though property setbacks, parking minimums, and noise ordinances still apply.

The **City of Tampa** is where Hillsborough gets complicated.

Tampa's STR ordinance — updated in 2024 — includes:

- A mandatory **City of Tampa Vacation Rental Permit** ($200 initial, $100 annual renewal).
- An **owner-occupancy requirement in select zoning districts**, most notably RS-50 and RS-60 zones in South Tampa and the Hyde Park neighborhood. In these zones, the property must be the operator's primary residence for at least 185 days per year. Davis Islands has historically had strong neighborhood pushback against STRs, and that's reflected in the enforcement posture.
- A **good neighbor policy** requiring operators to post local contact information (reachable within 30 minutes) and a written guest conduct agreement.
- Fines start at $500 for a first offense and escalate to $2,500 for repeat violations within 12 months.

Outside the owner-occupancy zones — Ybor City, West Tampa, Seminole Heights, parts of New Tampa — the rules are less restrictive. Ybor City in particular has a reasonably active STR market given its entertainment district character, though parking compliance is a recurring enforcement issue along 7th Avenue.

For a side-by-side breakdown:

| Factor | Pinellas (Unincorporated) | City of St. Pete | Hillsborough (Unincorporated) | City of Tampa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State DBPR License Required | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Local STR Permit/Registration | County BTC only | $150/year city reg + BTC | County license ~$75/year | $200 initial + $100/year |
| Owner-Occupancy Requirement | No | No | No | Yes (select zones) |
| Guest Occupancy Cap | State default | 2/bed + 2, max 12 | State default | Varies by zone |
| Minimum Stay Restriction | No | No | No | No (most zones) |
| Active Enforcement Program | Moderate | Active | Moderate | Active |

## Post-Helene Insurance: The Hidden STR Cost That's Changing the Math

This is something I talk about with every investor who calls me about a coastal STR deal right now. Hurricane Helene in 2024 rewired the insurance market for waterfront and flood-adjacent properties across Tampa Bay, and that directly affects STR profitability in ways that a naive cap rate calculation misses.

In AE flood zone properties in Shore Acres, Venetian Isles, and coastal St. Pete Beach, NFIP flood premiums ran $3,000–$5,000/year pre-Helene. Post-Helene, combined flood-plus-windstorm coverage for a typical 3-bedroom STR in a coastal zone is now running **$8,000–$14,000/year** depending on structure type, elevation certificate, and the specific carrier.

Some private flood insurers pulled out of Pinellas County entirely after Helene losses. That's forced operators back to NFIP, which doesn't cover lost rental income. For an STR grossing $60,000/year, a $12,000 insurance bill is a 20% top-line hit before you've paid a mortgage, management fees, or furnishing costs.

I'm not saying coastal STRs don't pencil — some still do. But underwrite the insurance before you fall in love with the rental income projections. I always pull the flood zone designation and estimated insurance range before I show an investor a coastal property. See the breakdown of [flood insurance costs in Pinellas County](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-pete-pinellas-county) and how [Hurricane Helene changed the insurance landscape](/questions/flood-insurance-after-hurricane-helene) for more context.

## Neighborhood-Level Reality: Where STRs Actually Work in 2026

Based on what I'm seeing in Stellar MLS transaction data and investor conversations, these are the submarkets where STRs are still generating viable returns:

**St. Pete Beach / Pass-a-Grille (Pinellas):** Strong tourist demand, permissive enough municipal rules relative to the rental income potential. Gross yields on well-located 2/1s can hit 8–10% before insurance and management. The catch: insurance costs and an increasingly tight permit review process in newer applications.

**Ybor City (Hillsborough):** Quirky, high-demand, and outside the owner-occupancy zones. Short drives to Amalie Arena and the convention center drive consistent demand. Renovated bungalows and casitas are the most popular unit types.

**Historic Kenwood / Grand Central (St. Pete):** The arts district vibe drives strong mid-week bookings from business travelers and event attendees. Walkability to Central Avenue and DTSP is a genuine draw. STR registration is straightforward here, and my clients who've bought bungalows in this pocket for STR conversion have generally been happy with the execution.

**South Tampa (Non-Restricted Zones):** Parts of Seminole Heights and Westshore Palms work if they're outside the owner-occupancy zones. Verify zoning at the specific parcel level before you make an offer — don't rely on neighborhood-level generalizations.

For a deeper look at the best zip codes for rental investment across the full Tampa Bay region, the [best Tampa Bay zip codes for rental property](/questions/best-tampa-bay-zip-codes-for-rental-property) page breaks down cap rates and occupancy data by ZIP.

## What to Do Before You Buy an STR Property in Tampa Bay

Here's the checklist I run through with every investor client:

1. **Verify the parcel's zoning** at the county property appraiser and city planning portal. Don't assume the neighborhood allows STRs — check the specific address.
2. **Confirm whether an HOA exists.** HOA rules are private covenants and are NOT preempted by Florida's anti-ban statute. A condo or townhouse HOA can absolutely prohibit STRs, and many do.
3. **Get a DBPR vacation rental license application ready** before closing — the license is tied to the property address and can take 3–6 weeks.
4. **Pull the flood zone designation** from FEMA's FIRM maps and get a preliminary insurance quote from a carrier who actually writes in Pinellas or Hillsborough right now.
5. **Underwrite with realistic management costs.** Professional STR management in Tampa Bay runs 20–30% of gross revenue. Add 5–10% for maintenance and turnover.
6. **Model a 60–65% annual occupancy rate** as a conservative baseline. The "Airbnb calculator" projections tend to assume 75–80%, which is achievable in peak season but not year-round.

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If you're evaluating an STR acquisition in Hillsborough or Pinellas and want a real read on what comparable properties are trading for — not what Zillow's algorithm says, but actual MLS comps with days-on-market and price-per-square-foot data — I'll pull 3 comps and text them to you within 24 hours, free. Drop your target address or neighborhood at [stpetehomeguide.com/contact](/contact) and I'll get back to you same day.

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Do you need a permit to operate an Airbnb in St. Petersburg, FL?**

Yes. The City of St. Petersburg requires a Short-Term Rental Registration and an active Business Tax Receipt before you can legally list a property on Airbnb or VRBO. As of 2026, the registration fee is $150 per year and must be renewed annually. Violations can result in fines starting at $500 per day.

**Q: Can I run a short-term rental anywhere in Pinellas County?**

Not everywhere. Unincorporated Pinellas County allows STRs in most residential zones but requires a county business tax receipt and compliance with Florida's state STR registration program. Individual municipalities — St. Pete, Clearwater, Largo, Dunedin — each have their own additional overlay rules that may restrict STRs more tightly.

**Q: Are short-term rentals legal in all of Hillsborough County?**

In unincorporated Hillsborough County, STRs are permitted in residential zones but require a county license and state registration under Florida DBPR. The City of Tampa has stricter rules, including an owner-occupancy requirement in certain zoning districts. South Tampa neighborhoods and some Hyde Park-adjacent zones have seen active enforcement.

**Q: How does Florida state law interact with local STR ordinances?**

Florida Statute §509.032 prevents local governments from banning STRs outright based solely on their classification as short-term rentals, but municipalities CAN regulate them through licensing, safety inspections, occupancy limits, and noise ordinances. This creates a patchwork: state law sets a floor, local rules set the ceiling on what's allowed.

**Q: What taxes apply to short-term rentals in Tampa Bay?**

STR operators in Tampa Bay typically owe Florida's 6% state sales tax, a county Tourist Development Tax (5.5% in Pinellas, 5% in Hillsborough), and any applicable local discretionary surtax. Platforms like Airbnb and VRBO collect and remit these taxes automatically for most bookings, but operators should verify for direct bookings.

**Q: Did Hurricane Helene change anything for short-term rental operators in Tampa Bay?**

Post-Helene, flood insurance costs have risen sharply for STR properties in coastal Pinellas — some operators in AE and VE flood zones are now paying $8,000–$14,000 per year for combined flood and windstorm coverage. That directly hits STR profit margins and has prompted some owners to sell rather than re-permit. It's a material factor in 2026 STR underwriting.


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*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.*
