STR rules · verified 1mo ago
Short-term rental rules in Statesboro, GA
Statesboro (Bulloch County seat, host of Georgia Southern University — 26,000+ enrollment, FBS Sun Belt Conference football at Allen E. Paulson Stadium) levies a 6% city hotel-motel excise tax under O.C.G.A. § 48-13-51(b) (cited in Georgia DCA Hotel-Motel Tax revenue report), generating $1.1M-$1.4M annually. The city does not publish a stand-alone short-term rental ordinance; STR activity falls under general zoning in the City of Statesboro Municipal Code with no separately codified STR chapter. Georgia state sales tax of 4% plus $5/night state hotel-motel fee (per FET-2021-01 eff July 1, 2021) apply. Georgia Southern home football Saturdays — including the 2026 season's six home games and the upcoming P4 matchup against a Power 4 opponent in Statesboro — drive the most concentrated STR demand surge in the Statesboro market. Georgia has no statewide STR preemption.
What's behind the sign-in
- Registration fees — initial + annual renewal cost, per permit type
- Permit caps + waitlists — exact cap values, current waitlist counts
- Owner-occupancy rules — days/year requirement, permit-class splits
- Zoning carve-outs — which districts allow / disallow STR
- Tax stack — TOT, hotel, county + state layers
- Stay limits — min/max nightly, max nights/year
- Operational requirements — parking, insurance, fire inspection, neighbor notice
- Penalties — per-night fines, revocation thresholds
- City-specific gotchas — HOA carve-outs, pending legislation, recent court rulings
- Refresh on demand — re-run the agentic pipeline against the city's current ordinance
Frequently asked
Are short-term rentals legal in Statesboro, GA?
Statesboro is currently unknown for short-term rentals. We couldn't extract a clear status from the city's published ordinance — most often because the city has no STR-specific rules and state defaults apply. For the actual fees, caps, owner-occupancy rules, and city-specific gotchas, sign in.
Do I need a permit to run an Airbnb in Statesboro?
Almost certainly yes — almost every U.S. city now requires a short-term rental permit, vacation rental permit, or transient lodging permit before you can legally list. The specifics for Statesboro (cost, renewal cycle, required documents) are behind sign-in. You can also read the source ordinance directly: https://dca.georgia.gov/community-assistance/government-authority-reporting/hotel-motel-excise-tax.
What happens if I rent without a permit in Statesboro?
Most cities charge per-night fines (a few hundred to a few thousand dollars per violation), escalating to cease-and-desist letters and platform delisting on repeat. Airbnb and Vrbo now share permit-validation feeds with most major cities, so unpermitted listings get blocked at the platform level. Sign in to see the specific penalty schedule for Statesboro.
How current is this data for Statesboro?
This record was verified 1mo ago against the city's published ordinance (.gov or the city's official municipal-code publisher). Cached cities re-verify on a cadence — daily for cities under active legislation, weekly otherwise. Signed-in users can hit Refresh on any city to force a fresh pull. If you're underwriting a deal, always confirm against the city's code-enforcement office before closing.
Can my HOA or condo association ban STRs even if Statesboro allows them?
Yes. City permits authorize you under municipal law, but your HOA, condo association, or co-op board sets contractual rules that override the city for your unit. Many HOAs adopted blanket STR bans between 2018 and 2024 in response to neighbor complaints. Read the CC&Rs, bylaws, and rental addendums before you buy with an STR plan — the city saying yes does not mean your building says yes.