Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lobby your town for zoning restrictions.
This is the only real answer. Restrictions on short term rentals are becoming pretty common. A common one is that an owner must live on the property being rented.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to reality where you have to deal with people that have different lifestyles and priorities than you.
I had to deal with it already and it sucked. The whole street is pretty pissed off. Some people are renting long term and that's fine, but if it becomes a party pad it's going to be awful.
Anonymous wrote:You town needs their own building department.
My beach town did the following back in 1982.
New multifamily housing illegal.
New Commercial Property illegal.
New buildings greater than two stories illegal.
While town resident only parking with sticker.
Beaches resident only picture IDs no day passes
No rentals under 30 days.
No Grouper homes.
If an owner rents for month or more must turn in beach pass and parking permit.
Only one car per house on street unless a $300 a year payment.
Anonymous wrote:I am so annoyed. We're in quiet burb of a generally touristy region (beaches 30 mins away) Our neighbors just sold their house. Had they sold in the spring, they would have had tons of families interested. The house sat and then was finally bought by a guy planning to rent it out. He says he will go for yearly rentals, but I checked with our town and there are NO restrictions on Airbnbs. We left the beach town we were in partly because the airbnb issue was out of control, and this area is all families and so much quieter. Anyone btdt with this situation? I really hope they find yearly tenants but I think they will be tempted by airbnb if they don't find someone quick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like you’ll be moving again.
We definitely cannot move locally: between interest rates and home prices, it would make absolutely zero sense financially. We'd need a smaller/crappy house and pay as much/more for it! But I am really annoyed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to reality where you have to deal with people that have different lifestyles and priorities than you.
I had to deal with it already and it sucked. The whole street is pretty pissed off. Some people are renting long term and that's fine, but if it becomes a party pad it's going to be awful.
I definitely get your concerns, OP. But you could end up with lousy neighbors either way – so odds are that any turnover increases your odds of some decent people. Fingers crossed it becomes a long term rental.
I can relate. The house next door to me is an AirBnB. I hate it personally, in part because we're not on huge lots and I don't love the idea that there is a rotating cast of strangers within a few yards of my front door. I didn't buy a house in a commercial area and I would never have expected a boarding house right outside my window. And there have been occasional issues. We caught one of the "guests" going through our mailbox (which is attached to our house, not on the curb) to see if their mail had been misdelivered! And another one literally drove across my front lawn rather than back out of the driveway. Also the house is not nearly as well maintained as it would be if FT residents were there.
Realistically though, most of the time it's a non-issue. I scowl at the "guests" and put up a row of hedges to reinforce the boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to reality where you have to deal with people that have different lifestyles and priorities than you.
I had to deal with it already and it sucked. The whole street is pretty pissed off. Some people are renting long term and that's fine, but if it becomes a party pad it's going to be awful.