Florida Porch

Short-term rentals

The booking is the easy part. The paperwork is the part to respect.

Before a Florida home, condo, cottage, or spare unit becomes a guest stay, check the license lane, the tax stack, the local rules, and the private documents that can still say no.

First stops

Do not open the calendar until these lanes are clear.

Property

Make sure the address can host.

Check the city, county, zoning office, HOA, condo association, landlord, deed restriction, and insurance policy before the listing goes live. A tax account or state license does not make private or local rules disappear.

Check local records

DBPR

Sort the lodging license question early.

Florida DBPR licenses and regulates public lodging establishments. A vacation rental can fall into that lane, so use DBPR's vacation-rental guidance before assuming a house or condo is just a casual rental.

DBPR vacation rental guide

State tax

State sales tax is only one layer.

Florida Revenue says state sales tax applies to rental charges or room rates for living or sleeping accommodations rented for six months or less, along with any applicable discretionary sales surtax.

DOR transient rental brochure

County tax

Tourist tax depends on the county.

Counties may have tourist development, convention development, tourist impact, or related local option transient rental taxes. Some are paid to DOR; many are paid directly to the county.

DOR tourist tax rate chart

Rough tax stack

Estimate the guest-facing tax before you set the price.

This calculator is only a planning estimate. Use DOR, the county tourist tax office, platform reports, and a Florida tax professional before you rely on a filing number.

Tax layers

A short stay can have several return paths.

State sales tax

Start with Florida's statewide sales tax on transient rental accommodations. The rate and filing path belong with Florida Revenue.

Discretionary sales surtax

Then check the county surtax. DOR says dealers collect the surtax with state sales tax and remit it to the Department.

Local option transient rental tax

Then check the county tourist tax lane. The rate and remittance office can change by county and sometimes by district.

Platform or direct booking

A platform may collect some taxes for some bookings. Direct bookings, repeat guests, owner websites, and platform gaps still need a written responsibility check.

Setup path

A practical order before the first guest.

  1. Confirm the address and the exact local government that controls zoning, permits, and short-term rental rules.
  2. Read the HOA, condo, lease, deed restriction, insurance policy, and mortgage or lender rules before accepting guests.
  3. Check whether DBPR vacation rental or public lodging licensing applies before operating.
  4. Register with Florida Revenue if the rental activity requires a sales and use tax account.
  5. Find the county tourist development tax rate and who receives the local return.
  6. Ask whether the city or county requires a local short-term rental registration, local business tax receipt, inspection, parking plan, emergency contact, occupancy limit, trash rule, or noise rule.
  7. Confirm exactly which taxes a booking platform collects for that listing and which taxes remain with the owner or manager.
  8. Keep the booking ledger, platform reports, tax returns, guest charges, exemption notes, complaints, inspections, and rule updates in one folder.

Watch-outs

The part that usually gets missed.

The platform may not close every tax gap.

Check the platform's tax settings for the exact property, county, and booking path. Then compare that to DOR and county instructions.

The county tax may not go to the state.

DOR's tourist tax chart says many counties collect local option transient rental taxes directly. That means one booking can create more than one filing path.

Local permission and tax registration are different questions.

A local tax account is not the same thing as zoning approval, a DBPR license, a city registration, or permission from an HOA or condo board.

Mandatory fees need careful tax treatment.

Cleaning, resort, amenity, pet, and service charges can change the taxable base depending on how they are charged. Use DOR, the county, and a tax professional before excluding a mandatory charge.

Record folder

Keep the rental proof in one place.

DBPR license or written reason the rental does not need that license
Florida Revenue registration, sales tax returns, and payment confirmations
County tourist development tax account, rate proof, returns, and payment confirmations
City or county short-term rental registration, local business tax receipt, inspections, and emergency contact proof
HOA, condo, landlord, deed, insurance, and lender permission or restriction notes
Booking ledger with dates, nightly charges, mandatory fees, tax collected, platform, guest, and payout
Platform tax collection reports, direct-booking invoices, refunds, cancellations, and exemption records
Complaint logs, parking/trash/noise messages, repair records, safety checks, and guest rules

Official checks

Sources used for this page

Last checked June 30, 2026. Use Florida Revenue, DBPR, the county tourist tax office, the city or county that controls the address, the written property documents, the platform's current tax report, and a qualified Florida tax or legal professional before you rely on a short-term rental answer.

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