Is a short-term rental legal in Myrtle Beach, SC?
Myrtle Beach regulates short-term rentals (defined in the zoning code as any rental of a dwelling for less than 90 continuous days) primarily through zoning, not a citywide STR permit.
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Legality turns on zoning district, not on whether the host is present. Zoning districts beginning with "R" (R5, R7, R8, R10, R15, RMM, RMH, RMH-MH) prohibit short-term/visitor-accommodation rentals, except the RMV district (explicitly created to allow visitor accommodations within a residential-classified, multi-family-high-density zone) and fewer than 30 grandfathered single-family houses citywide that were consistently used as short-term rentals prior to the current zoning code (per the city's official STR guidance page; no ordinance section enumerating the specific grandfathered parcels was located). Commercial, mixed-use, and resort-oriented districts (e.g., downtown commercial C7/C8, amusement (A), entertainment (E), campground (CG), highway-commercial districts) generally permit "visitor accommodations" as a listed use per the zoning code's permitted-use table (Article 15, ref. section 1503.A / 1501 use tables). No hosted-vs-unhosted distinction, owner-occupancy requirement, or numeric guest cap was found in any zoning, business-license, or tax provision reviewed. Ordinance 2024-69 (effective Dec. 10, 2024) additionally bars converting a qualifying short-term-rental building (>2 units, between Kings Highway and the Atlantic Ocean) to rental terms of 90+ days — a restriction on leaving short-term-rental use in that corridor, not a restriction on operating one.
What you need to operate
The full picture
Myrtle Beach regulates short-term rentals (defined in the zoning code as any rental of a dwelling for less than 90 continuous days) primarily through zoning, not a citywide STR permit. Every zoning district whose code begins with "R" (R5, R7, R8, R10, R15, RMM, RMH, RMH-MH — the city's single-family and multifamily residential districts) prohibits short-term/visitor-accommodation use outright, with two narrow exceptions: the RMV ("Multi-family Residential — High Density with Visitor Accommodations") district, which explicitly permits it, and fewer than 30 grandfathered houses citywide that were continuously used as short-term rentals before current zoning took effect. Short-term rentals are broadly a permitted commercial use in the city's commercial, mixed-use, and resort-oriented districts (downtown commercial, highway commercial, amusement, entertainment, campground, etc.) under the "visitor accommodations" use category. Any owner renting out real property in Myrtle Beach — short-term or long-term — must hold a City of Myrtle Beach business license (required since June 1, 2015), renewed annually by April 30 (5%/month penalty, capped at 30%, for late renewal; the same 5%/month penalty applies to operating a new rental before licensing), with the fee calculated on a gross-receipts sliding-scale schedule. Operating a rental business without a license is separately punishable by a fine of up to $1,092 per the city's own Business License FAQ (each day a separate offense), while the city's general STR/zoning guidance separately cites a misdemeanor cap of up to $500 and/or 30 days for zoning and business-license violations — both figures are reported here as stated in their respective official sources. As of December 10, 2024, Ordinance 2024-69 added a Short-Term Rental Conversion Overlay Zone covering all commercial-district parcels between Kings Highway and the Atlantic Ocean (29th Ave. S to 82nd Ave. N): any building of more than two units that was constructed for, or has ever been used as, a short-term rental cannot be converted to rental terms of 90 days or more — the ordinance restricts converting OUT of short-term use in that corridor, it does not restrict operating as a short-term rental. Combined taxes on gross short-term rental proceeds total 10%: 7% state (5% state sales tax + 2% state accommodations tax), 1.5% City of Myrtle Beach (0.5% Local Accommodations Tax + 1% Hospitality Fee), and 1.5% Horry County Hospitality Fee (the in-city rate; 3% applies outside city limits). Marketplace facilitators (Airbnb, Vrbo, etc.) are required by SC DOR to register, collect, and remit sales/accommodations tax on facilitated bookings, and hosts who book exclusively through such platforms are not required to separately hold a state Retail License.
Taxes on guests & hosts
| Tax | Rate | Applies to | Platform collects | Official source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Carolina State Sales Tax + State Accommodations Tax (combined) | 7% (5% state sales tax + 2% state accommodations tax) | Gross proceeds from rental of sleeping accommodations for stays of less than 90 consecutive days | Yes | source |
| City of Myrtle Beach Local Accommodations Tax + Hospitality Fee (combined) | 1.5% (0.5% Local Accommodations Tax + 1% Hospitality Fee) | Gross proceeds (listing price including cleaning/guest fees) from accommodations and short-term rentals for stays of less than 90 consecutive days, in addition to state and Horry County taxes | Yes | source |
| Horry County Hospitality Fee (in-city rate) | 1.5% of gross proceeds (rate for businesses located inside city limits, e.g. Myrtle Beach; 3% applies outside city limits) | Rental of transient accommodations for stays shorter than 90 consecutive days at the same location to the same patron | Yes | source |
Enforcement
What we could not verify (7)
- Exact business-license dollar cost for renting a single short-term-rental dwelling was not conclusively identified in the city's general gross-receipts rate schedule (BLRates.pdf), which is organized by broad revenue-based classes and specific NAICS categories (e.g., Hotel/Motel classes 9.91/9.92) rather than a clearly labeled 'residential/short-term rental' line; cost is left null rather than guessed.
- Two different official City of Myrtle Beach sources state different maximum penalties for non-compliant rental operation: the general STR/zoning guidance page cites up to $500 and/or 30 days (misdemeanor cap), while the Business License FAQ cites up to $1,092.00 and/or imprisonment (per day) for operating without a license. Both are reported as stated; they were not reconciled against the underlying ordinance text (municode.com was unreachable during this task; see fetch-method caveat below).
- The full City of Myrtle Beach Zoning Code (Appendix A) PDF used to cross-check district names, definitions, and use tables is dated January 22, 2019. It was not confirmed to reflect every zoning amendment enacted since then, aside from Ordinance 2024-69 (STR Conversion Overlay), which was separately verified from its own ordinance PDF. Hosts should confirm a specific parcel's current zoning status via the Planning & Zoning Department (843-918-1179) before relying on the general 'R-zones prohibited except RMV / grandfathered houses' characterization in this profile.
- library.municode.com (Myrtle Beach's official code portal) returned HTTP 403/503 to automated fetch attempts throughout this task. Zoning-district and business-license-ordinance claims were instead corroborated via the city's own PDF documents (zoning code PDF, ordinance PDFs, Business License FAQ/rate PDFs) hosted on cityofmyrtlebeach.com / its cms6.revize.com CMS backend, and via the city's own informational web pages. No Wayback Machine capture was needed since these alternate official documents were directly fetchable.
- Ordinance 2024-69 (Short-Term Rental Conversion Overlay Zone) is being challenged in a still-pending lawsuit (MBSC Property South v. City of Myrtle Beach, filed Feb. 2025, removed to federal court March 2025, seeking ~$6.5–10M in damages). No final ruling was located as of this task's research date (2026-07-18); the ordinance remains in effect but its long-term durability is not fully settled.
- collectedByPlatform:true for all three tax lines is based on combining South Carolina DOR's marketplace-facilitator rule (which legally applies to state sales and accommodations tax) with the city's own reporting-form PDF describing what a 'provider' must collect, corroborated by Airbnb's own (non-governmental) help-center page describing what it collects for Horry County/Myrtle Beach bookings. No single government source explicitly confirms that Airbnb/Vrbo remit the city's 1.5% and the county's 1.5% local components in every case; this is treated as reasonably well-corroborated rather than definitively government-confirmed.
- The 'fewer than 30' grandfathered pre-existing short-term-rental houses in R-zoned residential districts figure comes from the city's own official STR informational web page; no ordinance section or public list enumerating the specific grandfathered parcels was independently located.
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Sources
- City of Myrtle Beach — Short-Term Rental / Visitor Accommodation guidance (zoning, grandfathering, penalties)
- City of Myrtle Beach — Business License Division
- City of Myrtle Beach — Business License FAQs (PDF)
- City of Myrtle Beach — Business License Rates schedule, effective business license year starting 1/1/2023 (PDF)
- City of Myrtle Beach — Code of Ordinances, Appendix A Zoning (definitions, district table, permitted-use tables) (PDF, dated 1/22/2019)
- City of Myrtle Beach — What Are Short Term Rentals? Zone Map (PDF)
- City of Myrtle Beach — Ordinance 2024-69, Short Term Rental Conversion Overlay Zone (PDF)
- City of Myrtle Beach — Hospitality Tax, Local Accommodations Tax and Hospitality Fee rate history/settlement explainer
- City of Myrtle Beach — Monthly Hospitality & Local Accommodations Tax Reporting Form, effective 7/1/2021 (PDF; states exact 0.5%/1%/1.5% rate breakdown)
- Horry County, SC — Treasurer, Hospitality Fee
- South Carolina Department of Revenue — Accommodations (sales/use tax index)
- South Carolina Department of Revenue — Marketplace Facilitators and Third Parties Whose Products Are Sold on a Marketplace
- Municode Library — Code of Ordinances, City of Myrtle Beach, SC (official code portal; automated fetch returned 403/503 during this task, cross-verified via city's own PDFs instead)
- WMBF News — Myrtle Beach city leaders move forward with short-term rental overlay with modifications (2nd reading/effective date, Dec. 10, 2024)
- WMBF News — New lawsuit challenges Myrtle Beach's short-term rental overlay (Feb. 2025)
- WBTW — Resort's owner sues Myrtle Beach over new short-rental ordinance, claims $6.5M in lost profit
- MyHorryNews — Myrtle Beach leaders ban long-term rental conversions in some areas of the city
- Airbnb Help Center — Occupancy tax collection and remittance by Airbnb in South Carolina (corroboration only, not the cited source for any tax rate)
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STRWatch publishes educational information about short-term rental regulation, verified against the official sources linked above as of the date shown. It is not legal advice, and rules change — a city can move between our verification passes. For decisions with money at stake, confirm with the authority linked above or a local attorney.