The Landscape Shifted: What You Need to Know
Austin's short-term rental market has always been dynamic, but 2025 marks a critical inflection point. New regulations and licensing requirements are now in effect, and compliance deadlines are approaching fast. The most pressing deadline: July 2026, when the city's new STR licensing platform enforcement begins.
If you own a property in Austin and rent it short-term, whether full-time or occasionally, this guide covers what changed, what you need to do, and how to stay compliant before enforcement begins.
What Changed in 2025?
New Licensing Requirements
Austin implemented a mandatory STR license that applies to all short-term rentals, regardless of property type or rental frequency. This replaced the previous neighborhood-by-neighborhood patchwork of rules.
- All STRs require a license. If you rent your property (or even part of it) for fewer than 30 consecutive days, you need one.
- License is property-specific. You cannot transfer a license between properties or sublet it.
- Annual renewal required. Licenses expire December 31 and must be renewed yearly.
Neighborhood Caps
The city implemented neighborhood STR caps to prevent market saturation and maintain neighborhood character. Cap thresholds vary by neighborhood, ranging from 5% to 15% of residential parcels.
Operational Standards
New operational rules now apply to all licensed STRs:
- Maximum occupancy limits (typically 2 people per bedroom + 2)
- Noise ordinance compliance (stricter enforcement)
- Parking requirements (on-site or designated off-site)
- Host contact requirements (must respond to complaints within 1 hour)
- Guest agreement required (must include quiet hours, parking, pool/hot tub rules if applicable)
The July 2026 Deadline: What Happens
The city's new STR licensing platform launches enforcement July 1, 2026. This is the date when the city begins actively enforcing compliance and revoking non-compliant licenses.
What this means:
- Unlicensed STRs will face fines and removal from booking platforms
- Properties operating outside caps will be delisted
- Non-compliant operational practices trigger warnings and potential license suspension
- Tax liability increases (city aggressively audits STR income)
The window to get compliant is now. After July 2026, compliance becomes mandatory, not optional.
Step-by-Step: How to Get Licensed
Step 1: Check Your Neighborhood's Cap Status
Before investing time in the application, verify your neighborhood hasn't reached its STR cap. Visit austintexas.gov/str-license and search your address.
Step 2: Gather Required Documents
The application requires:
- Property deed or proof of ownership (recent title report)
- Property survey or lot dimensions
- Floor plan showing bedrooms, bathrooms, and square footage
- Proof of homeowner's insurance or liability insurance
- Photo documentation of parking (on-site or designated off-site spaces)
- Guest agreement template (city provides standard form)
Step 3: Complete the Online Application
Applications are submitted exclusively through the STR License Portal at austintexas.gov/str-license. The online portal walks you through each section and provides real-time validation.
Processing Times Are Long
Initial license processing typically takes 45–60 days. Incomplete applications are returned for revision, which extends timelines. Submit your application well before any self-imposed deadlines.
Step 4: Pay the License Fee
License fees vary by property size and neighborhood but typically range from $400–$800 for the first year. Annual renewal is slightly less.
Step 5: Wait for Approval & Enforcement Registration
Once approved, you receive a license number and can register with your booking platforms (Airbnb, VRBO, etc.). Most platforms now require this license number to list a property.
What Happens If You Don't Comply?
The city is aggressive about enforcement. Complaint-driven investigations often reveal that properties claiming to be "residential" are actually generating $50k–$100k+ annually in STR revenue. Tax evasion + licensing violations compound the liability.
Tax Implications
STR licensing increased tax visibility. The city now cross-references booking platforms with licensed properties, making tax evasion nearly impossible. Property owners reporting STR income must:
- Report all STR revenue on Schedule C (self-employment income)
- Deduct qualified expenses: mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, maintenance, utilities, cleaning, management fees
- Pay self-employment tax (~15.3% on net income)
- File quarterly estimated tax payments if STR income exceeds $1,000
Many owners only now realize STR income is taxable. The city's enforcement stance has shifted from lenient to aggressive.
What Doesn't Change (Yet)
Some commonly asked questions about what Austin STR regulations do not currently affect:
- Owner-occupancy requirement: Austin does not require owner-occupancy for STRs (unlike some other cities).
- Length-of-stay minimums: You can rent for any duration (single night or longer).
- Advertising restrictions: You can list on any platform: Airbnb, VRBO, Booking.com, etc.
Black Key Can Handle the Complexity
If this feels overwhelming, it's because it is. STR compliance requires legal knowledge, operational discipline, and ongoing attention.
Black Key manages the full compliance lifecycle for our owners: license applications, operational compliance, guest management, tax-ready reporting, and ongoing regulatory updates. You focus on your property; we handle the rest.
Let's Get Your Property Licensed
Start your free income estimate and see how Black Key can help you navigate STR licensing and compliance. We'll walk you through next steps.
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