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  3. Houston’s New STR Rules Are Three Months Old. Neighbors Say Nothing Has Changed.

Houston’s New STR Rules Are Three Months Old. Neighbors Say Nothing Has Changed.

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Meredith Lane
May 10, 2026 9 min read
Houston residential neighborhood showing tension between short-term rental properties and permanent residents

Key Takeaways

  • Houston’s STR ordinance took effect January 1, 2026, with enforcement beginning April 1, but residents report virtually no change in nuisance behavior from problem properties.
  • The city’s 24-hour complaint hotline routes to a California call center with no reference numbers, no follow-up, and no enforcement teeth.
  • Houston delayed mandatory platform delisting of unregistered STRs to January 1, 2027, removing the most powerful enforcement lever before it was ever used.
  • Austin’s contrasting model requires platforms to remove unlicensed listings within 10 days of a city request starting July 1, 2026, with $500/day fines for non-compliance.
  • With the FIFA World Cup arriving in Houston this summer, the gap between regulation on paper and enforcement on the ground is widening at the worst possible time.

StaySTRA data shows 9,325 active short-term rental listings in Houston with an average daily rate of $218 and occupancy running at 34% as of February 2026. The market grew 34% in a single year, expanding from roughly 7,400 listings in 2024 to nearly 10,000 by late 2025. That rapid supply growth is exactly what prompted Houston City Council to adopt the city’s first STR ordinance on April 16, 2025. Five weeks into formal enforcement, neighbors say the rules have changed nothing.

What Houston Promised

The ordinance sounded comprehensive. Every STR operator within city limits would need an annual certificate of registration at $275 per unit. Properties would require a local emergency contact reachable within one hour. Owners would complete human-trafficking awareness training. A 24-hour complaint hotline, powered by Granicus Host Compliance software (at a cost of approximately $1.6 million to the city), would route resident concerns to the appropriate department. Violations would carry fines of $100 to $500 per day. Three revoked registrations in two years would trigger platform delisting.

Registration opened October 1, 2025, with enforcement scheduled for April 1, 2026. By the numbers, compliance looked promising on paper: nearly 4,000 STRs registered with the city, another 1,100 pending, and 640 properties red-tagged for non-registration. The city’s Administration and Regulatory Affairs department claims 83% of known STRs are in some stage of compliance.

That 83% number obscures more than it reveals.

What Enforcement Actually Looks Like on the Ground

Roosevelt Gilmore lives in the Third Ward on a block with five short-term rentals. He has witnessed street fights spilling from rental properties, illegal parking on neighbors’ lawns, and incidents involving intoxicated individuals. The ordinance was supposed to give residents like Gilmore a mechanism for accountability. What he got was a phone number that rings in California.

“The hotline really doesn’t help you at all,” Gilmore told local media.

The complaint system works like this: a resident calls the 24-hour line, which connects to a call center operated by Granicus. The caller does not receive a reference number or incident number. They are told someone will “contact proper authorities” without being told which authorities those are. If nothing happens (and nothing does), the only recourse is a recording directing the caller to dial 311.

Noise complaints get routed to the Houston Police Department. Trash violations go to Solid Waste Management. Dangerous building complaints land at Houston Public Works. Fire code issues reach the Houston Fire Department. Each department treats the complaint as a standalone dispatch, disconnected from the property’s STR status. No single office owns the enforcement lifecycle. No one is tracking whether the same property generates complaints week after week.

The neighborhoods bearing the heaviest burden are predictable: Montrose, Midtown, The Heights, and the Third Ward. These are exactly the neighborhoods where resident-organized opposition pushed for the ordinance in the first place.

The Platform Delisting Delay

The ordinance’s strongest enforcement mechanism was never about fines. It was about visibility. An STR that gets removed from Airbnb and Vrbo cannot generate bookings. Platform delisting is the nuclear option, and it works precisely because it hits operators where it hurts.

Houston delayed it.

The city gave Airbnb and Vrbo until January 1, 2027, to remove unregistered properties. That is eight months after enforcement was supposed to begin. The justification from officials was familiar: give operators “as much time as possible” to come into compliance.

Sebastien Long, president of the Texas Short-Term Rental Association, has been blunt about the result. He told the Houston Press that the ordinance “has no real strength.” Long noted that stronger measures proposed during drafting, including mandatory noise meters and enhanced police intervention language, were rejected. What passed was a compromise designed to satisfy everyone and enforce nothing.

The delay creates a perverse incentive structure. Operators running the worst-offending party houses know they have until 2027 before platforms will touch them. The $100-to-$500 daily fines exist in theory, but without a centralized enforcement office tracking repeat offenders across departments, the probability of actually paying those fines approaches zero.

The Social Media Loophole

There is a deeper problem the ordinance cannot reach. Many of Houston’s most problematic properties do not book through Airbnb or Vrbo at all. They book through TikTok and Instagram. These are event spaces marketed as “mansion rentals” or “party houses” directly on social media, where no registration number is required, no platform policy applies, and no complaint hotline can intervene.

Platform enforcement, even when it eventually arrives in 2027, will not touch these operators. They exist entirely outside the regulatory framework Houston built. The ordinance was designed around the assumption that STRs operate on recognized booking platforms. The worst actors abandoned those platforms years ago.

Austin Is Building a Different Model

Two hundred miles west, Austin is preparing to demonstrate what platform enforcement looks like when a city does not blink.

Starting July 1, 2026, Austin will require booking platforms to display valid license numbers on every listing, remove unlicensed properties within 10 days of a city request, and stop collecting booking fees on unlicensed STRs. Violations carry fines of up to $500 per day, assessed against the platform, not just the individual operator.

The scale of Austin’s challenge is larger than Houston’s. Roughly 15,000 STR listings are active in Austin. Only about 2,200 hold city licenses. That means approximately 13,000 listings, or 85%, could face removal after July 1.

The critical difference is not the fine amount. Both cities cap daily violations at $500. The difference is who bears the enforcement burden. In Houston, the city routes complaints to existing departments and hopes something happens. In Austin, the city sends a delisting notice to Airbnb, and if the listing is still live 10 days later, the platform itself owes $500 per day. The platform becomes the enforcement agent, not the city bureaucracy.

Nashville offers the proof of concept. With just four dedicated staff members and Granicus compliance technology, Nashville achieved 91% STR compliance. The city did not accomplish this through hotlines or complaint routing. It accomplished this by making compliance a condition of platform visibility.

The World Cup Test

Houston is hosting FIFA World Cup matches this summer. Short-term rental bookings in the metro area are up 53% year-over-year for June and July. The surge is creating exactly the conditions that make enforcement failures visible: more properties operating, more guests arriving, more neighbors affected.

Council Member Julian Ramirez acknowledged the learning curve. “This is our first ordinance, so if we need to make adjustments, we certainly can do that,” he told reporters. That flexibility sounds reasonable in a vacuum. In context, it sounds like permission to kick enforcement down the road while the city collects $275 registration fees from operators who were already compliant.

The operators who comply voluntarily were never the problem. The problem properties are the ones that will not register, will not answer noise complaints, and will not stop until a platform removes their listing. Houston gave those operators another eight months.

What Effective Enforcement Actually Requires

The pattern is clear across cities that have made STR enforcement work. Three elements are non-negotiable.

First, platform accountability with financial teeth. The platform must face direct financial consequences for hosting non-compliant listings. New York’s Local Law 18 proved this model works. Listings dropped from 38,000 to under 10,000 after platforms were required to verify registration. Austin is adopting the same principle. Houston is not.

Second, a dedicated enforcement office. Routing complaints to existing departments guarantees they will be treated as low-priority dispatches. San Diego funds its STR enforcement office entirely from registration fees ($7.5 million in fees against $6.7 million in costs). The program is self-sustaining and purpose-built. Houston’s distributed model ensures no single department owns the problem.

Third, data integration. Compliance software like Granicus can identify unregistered listings, track repeat offenders, and automate platform notifications. Houston bought the software. It has not built the operational workflow to use it as an enforcement tool rather than a registration database.

Houston spent $1.6 million on compliance technology and built a hotline that rings in California. The ordinance exists. The enforcement does not. For residents on blocks with five STRs and nightly street fights, the distinction between no rules and unenforced rules is academic.

See current Houston STR market data on StaySTRA to understand the full scope of the market operators and investors are navigating.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Houston actually enforcing its short-term rental ordinance in 2026?

Houston’s STR ordinance took effect January 1, 2026, with formal enforcement beginning April 1. However, the city delayed mandatory platform delisting of unregistered properties to January 1, 2027. Current enforcement relies on complaint routing to existing city departments, which residents report is ineffective.

How many short-term rentals are registered in Houston?

As of spring 2026, approximately 4,000 STRs are registered with the city and another 1,100 applications are pending. The city estimates roughly 10,500 total STR units in Houston, meaning thousands remain unregistered despite the ordinance being in effect.

How does Houston’s STR enforcement compare to Austin’s?

Houston relies on a complaint hotline and voluntary registration, with platform delisting delayed until 2027. Austin requires platforms to remove unlicensed listings within 10 days of a city request starting July 1, 2026, with $500/day fines assessed against the platform itself. Austin’s model puts the enforcement burden on platforms rather than city bureaucracy.

What happens if a Houston STR operator does not register?

Unregistered operators face fines of $100 to $500 per day. However, enforcement requires the city to identify, cite, and pursue the operator through existing departmental channels. Platform removal of the listing will not occur until January 1, 2027, at the earliest.

Will the FIFA World Cup affect Houston’s STR enforcement?

Houston STR bookings are up 53% year-over-year for summer 2026 due to the World Cup. The surge will test whether the city can enforce its ordinance under increased demand. Officials have indicated willingness to adjust the rules, but no strengthening measures have been announced.

We do our best to keep our reporting accurate and up to date, but situations evolve and we are only human. Always verify current details directly with local officials and sources before making decisions.

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Evaluating Houston’s STR market fundamentals? Use StaySTRA’s analyzer tool to see real-time occupancy, revenue, and ADR data across Texas markets before making your next investment decision. For Dallas market context, including the ongoing Texas Supreme Court STR case, see our Dallas enforcement coverage and Austin’s platform enforcement deadline analysis.

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Meredith Lane

Meredith Lane

Investigative Writer & Community Impact Correspondent

Investigative reporter covering the real-world impacts of short-term rentals on neighborhoods and communities. I dig into what policies actually do on the ground, not just what officials say they do.

Writes about: Hot Topics Regulations Localities Short-Term Rentals Buying An Airbnb
72 articles · Writing since Apr 2025
Previous Article Airbnb Just Hired a Former Meta AI Chief. Here Is What It Means for How Guests Find Your Listing.

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