Is a short-term rental legal in St. Augustine, FL?
Whole-home short-term rentals are legal citywide but zoning district determines the minimum stay: in RS-1 and RS-2 (single-family residential) districts, a grandfathered 2010 rule (recodified by Ordinance 2019-51, effective January 27, 2020) allows rentals only for periods of one week or longer (Sec.
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The city's vacation-rental registration/inspection scheme (Ord. 2019-50, City Code §§28-145 to 28-154) applies to any 'vacation rental' as defined by Fla. Stat. §509.242 (rented >3 times/year for stays under 30 days, or held out to the public as such). Separately, zoning overlays a minimum-stay floor that varies by district: RS-1/RS-2 = 1 week minimum (nightly banned), HP-1 = 30-day/monthly minimum (nightly and weekly banned), all other zoning districts = nightly allowed. The RS-1/RS-2 and HP-1 minimum-stay rules survive Florida's 2011 state preemption of local duration/frequency regulation (Fla. Stat. §509.032(7)(b)) because they trace to Ordinance 2010-24, adopted August 23, 2010 - before the June 1, 2011 grandfather cutoff - and were recodified in Ordinance 2019-51 citing that grandfather status explicitly.
What you need to operate
The full picture
Whole-home short-term rentals are legal citywide but zoning district determines the minimum stay: in RS-1 and RS-2 (single-family residential) districts, a grandfathered 2010 rule (recodified by Ordinance 2019-51, effective January 27, 2020) allows rentals only for periods of one week or longer (Sec. 28-155(d): nightly rentals are deemed a motel use), so nightly rentals are prohibited there; in HP-1 (Historic Preservation) zoning, Ordinance 2019-51/2010-24 limits rentals to 30 days (monthly) or longer; all other zoning districts allow nightly rentals. Every vacation rental, regardless of district, must register annually with the City (fee $303.03 base + $79.30 per bedroom, effective per the City's current fee schedule, due each October 1 with a $100 late fee) and pass an annual Fire Department life-safety inspection under Ordinance 2019-50 (effective July 1, 2020). Maximum occupancy is 12 persons (2 per bedroom plus up to 2 minor children), on-site stabilized parking of 1 space per bedroom is required in districts with parking requirements, and hosts must also hold a Florida DBPR Vacation Rental license and collect/remit the 6% state transient rental tax, 0.5% St. Johns County discretionary surtax, and 5% St. Johns County Tourist Development ('bed') Tax. St. Johns County's separate short-term rental registration ordinance (2021-23) does not apply inside St. Augustine city limits, but the county TDT applies countywide.
Taxes on guests & hosts
| Tax | Rate | Applies to | Platform collects | Official source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Florida State Transient Rental (Sales) Tax | 6% | Rentals of living quarters for 6 months or less | Yes | source |
| St. Johns County Discretionary Sales Surtax | 0.5% | Same transactions as the state transient rental tax (in effect Jan 1, 2016 - Dec 31, 2035) | Yes | source |
| St. Johns County Tourist Development Tax ("bed tax") | 5% | Transient/short-term (6 months or less) living accommodations countywide, including within St. Augustine city limits | Not verified | source |
Enforcement
What we could not verify (5)
- The exact current per-day fine amount for vacation-rental code enforcement violations (referenced generally as 'Article VI: Code Enforcement') was not located in an official source and needs a direct pull of that code article.
- Whether Airbnb, Vrbo, or other platforms have a direct collection agreement with the St. Johns County Tax Collector for the 5% Tourist Development Tax on St. Augustine listings was not confirmed via an official source; sjctax.us does not publish a platform-agreement list, so collectedByPlatform for that tax is left null.
- The fee resolution the city cites for the $303.03 base + $79.30/bedroom registration fee (referred to as 'Resolution 2025-41' on the city's own program page) could not be independently opened as a readable PDF during this task (the DocumentCenter file that matched most closely downloaded as a Word/DOC file under a different resolution number, RES-2024-41, and did not parse as the fee schedule); the fee figures are corroborated by two separate official citystaug.com pages (program page and FAQ) but not by the underlying resolution text itself.
- Ordinance 2019-50's signature block is dated '27th day of January, 2019' while its own preamble references a September 9, 2019 City Commission hearing and a January 7, 2020 Planning & Zoning Board recommendation, and its companion Ordinance 2019-51 (same case, same signature date format) is dated '27th day of January, 2020.' This is very likely a clerical/scan artifact (year field should read 2020) rather than a substantive discrepancy, since the ordinance's own Section 4 fixes an unambiguous effective date of July 1, 2020 pursuant to Fla. Stat. §166.041(4) - but the passage date itself is not certain to the day.
- Whether St. Augustine vacation rental operators must additionally obtain a City of St. Augustine (or St. Johns County) Local Business Tax Receipt was not confirmed for city-limits properties; the county's own program page lists a Business Tax Receipt as a required document for its unincorporated-area registration only, and no equivalent requirement was located on the city's own program/FAQ pages, so it was omitted from requirements[] rather than guessed.
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Sources
- City of St. Augustine - Short Term Rentals (official program page)
- Ordinance No. 2019-50 (Vacation Rental Regulations, City Code §§28-145 to 28-154)
- Ordinance No. 2019-51 (Effect of Ordinance 2010-24 on RS-1/RS-2 Short-Term Rentals, City Code §28-155)
- City of St. Augustine FAQ - Do Short Term Rentals need to be registered with the City?
- City of St. Augustine FAQ - Where are Short Term Rentals allowed in the City?
- City of St. Augustine FAQ - Short Term Rentals (registration fees, occupancy, parking, inspection)
- St. Johns County Tax Collector - Tourist Development Tax
- St. Johns County - Short Term Vacation Rentals (county registration ordinance, unincorporated areas east of Intracoastal Waterway)
- Florida DBPR - Guide to Vacation Rentals and Timeshare Projects
- Florida Dept. of Revenue - Sales and Use Tax
- Florida Dept. of Revenue - Discretionary Sales Surtax Information (DR-15DSS, 2026)
- 2025 Florida Statutes §509.032 - Duties of division; general
- 2025 Florida Statutes §212.03 - Transient rentals tax; rate, procedure, enforcement, exemptions
- masterhost.ca - St. Augustine's Comprehensive Guide to Short-Term Rental Regulations (discovery only, vendor guide)
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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.