Last week, the city of Austin released a series of working drafts to change the current rules surrounding short term rentals in the city. This comprehensive update to the way the city will license and regulate STRS moving forward has been in the works for over a year. It all started, when a series of court cases made the current short term rental ordinance no longer viable. The court cases established a few principles that will have to be integrated into whatever version of the proposed changes eventually gets passed.
In 2019, the Zatari vs. City of Austin case established that occupancy limits could not be created for STRs specifically. The city can regulate occupancy for single-family homes but that is determined by the property maintenance code. Thus, any future amendment addressing short-term rental use in the city code will be without respect to occupancy limits. In 2023, the Anding vs. City of Austin case made it to the federal court, where the judge ruled the city’s limiting of permits to only owner-occupants unconstitutional. This case forced the City of Austin to begin issuing STR licenses regardless of whether that home was a primary residence or an investment property. In the future, any Austin STR rules must not be based on the primary-residence requirement. The City’s overhaul plan involves changing the Land Development Code to include STR use as an accessory use, and adding Short Term Rentals to the Business Regulations section of the city code. I have reviewed the working drafts, and attended the first two public-input sessions. In my opinion, there are various oversights with the drafted new licensing requirements, but the proposed rules are actually quite lenient. These code changes are only proposed at this time, but the earliest time these changes could go into effect would be 2/27/23. Anyone who has applied for or been granted a permit before this date would be grandfathered in and allowed to continue to operate indefinitely so long as they are a “good actor” and renew the permit timely. As has been the case previously, permits will be non-transferable when real estate is sold. The working draft specifies the following:
The other requirements are fairly typical and lenient in my opinion. For example, STR owners must complete a self-administered life-safety test and provide a $1,000,000 liability policy. The City is currently gathering public-input on these revisions. Now, is your time to ask questions, make comments, and shape the way this policy forms. You can Sign Up to Attend One of These Information Sessions
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