Short-term-rental rules
Can you Airbnb in Montclair, NJ?
Researched and reviewed by Jake Lee, FounderCurrent as of July 2026How this atlas is maintained
Montclair has no township-wide short-term-rental ordinance, permit, license, or ban: the code (current through Feb 24, 2026) never defines or regulates STRs generally, so under-30-night rentals are legal by default. They sit in a zoning gray area, though: Montclair's zoning is permissive (only listed uses are allowed) and transient lodging is not a listed use in residential zones, ADUs must be rented for at least six months, and renting rooms by the night fits the code's licensed rooming-house category. The township has publicly discussed a comprehensive STR ordinance since 2023, so hosts should confirm with the Zoning Office and watch for new legislation.
What the rules say in Montclair
- No STR-specific ordinance exists anywhere in the Township Code (legislation through 02-24-2026): no permit, license, registration, night cap, or ban aimed at short-term rentals generally.
- Zoning is permissive: §347-7 says land may be used only for purposes permitted in the zone, and residential zones (R-O/R-O(a)/R-1/R-2 per §§347-29, 347-35, 347-41, 347-47) list only one- and two-family dwellings and similar uses; transient lodging/STR is not an enumerated use, so the zoning officer could treat a dedicated whole-home STR as an unpermitted change of use. Confirm with the Department of Planning & Community Development (973-509-4954).
- Accessory dwelling units may NOT be short-term rented: §347-8D(12) requires a minimum rental term of six months, and §347-8D(1) requires the owner to live on the property.
- Renting individual rooms by the night matches the code's ROOMING HOUSE definition (§347-2: lodgers rent rooms 'for one or more nights') and rooming/boardinghouses require an annual license from the Building Inspector under Chapter 96 ($25/year, building, fire, and health inspections).
- The zoning definition of FAMILY (§347-2) requires a single nonprofit housekeeping unit 'of a permanent and domestic character' with at most two boarders/roomers, which cuts against running a de facto lodging business in a dwelling.
- Rent control (Chapter 257, adopted 2022) requires annual rent registration ($10/unit) for covered units, but §257-2B exempts single-family homes, single condo/co-op units, owner-occupied buildings of 3 or fewer units, and 'motels, hotels, and similar type buildings intended for transient use', so most typical STR setups fall outside it.
- The only STR use the township has expressly blessed is inside the Orange Road Redevelopment Area: in August 2023 the Planning Board found the Council's plan amendment allowing short-stay rentals (up to 30 days) at the MC Residences building consistent with the master plan, with a 3% occupancy tax discussed; officials acknowledged Montclair lacks, and should draft, a general STR ordinance.
- New Jersey state law still applies: STR stays are transient accommodations subject to state sales tax and occupancy fees (typically collected by Airbnb/Vrbo), and landlords of non-owner-occupied rentals have state registration duties under N.J.S.A. 46:8-27 et seq.
Sources: Township of Montclair Code, table of contents (eCode360, through 02-24-2026); Montclair Code Chapter 347 Zoning (chapter index); Montclair Code §347-2 Definition of terms (family, dwelling unit, rooming house, boardinghouse); Montclair Code §347-7 Uses to conform to zone regulations (permissive zoning); Montclair Code §347-8 Accessory dwelling units (6-month minimum rental term, owner occupancy); Montclair Code §347-29 R-O Zone permitted principal uses (incorporated by R-1 §347-41); Montclair Code Chapter 96 Boardinghouses (rooming/boardinghouse licensing); Montclair Code Chapter 257 Rent Regulation (§257-2 applicability and exemptions; rent registration); Montclair Code Chapter 190 Housing (standards code; no rental licensing scheme); Montclair Local (Aug 2023): Planning Board approves council proposal for short-term rental units at MC Residences; township lacks general STR ordinance. Last reviewed 2026-07.
How short-term rentals are regulated in New Jersey
- New Jersey has no single statewide short-term-rental ban. Instead, each municipality sets its own rules through local ordinances, which is why neighboring Bergen towns can differ completely.
- Statewide, short-term rentals are generally subject to NJ Sales Tax and the State Occupancy Fee (and, in some areas, local taxes) on stays under 90 days, unless booked through certain channels that collect on the host's behalf.
- Common municipal controls include registration or permits, owner-occupancy requirements, minimum-stay rules, caps on rental nights, and zoning limits on which districts allow short-term use.
- Rules change. An ordinance can be added or amended at any time. Always confirm the current rule with the municipality before listing.
Montclair short-term-rental FAQ
Can I run a short-term rental (Airbnb) in Montclair, NJ?
Montclair has no township-wide short-term-rental ordinance, permit, license, or ban: the code (current through Feb 24, 2026) never defines or regulates STRs generally, so under-30-night rentals are legal by default. They sit in a zoning gray area, though: Montclair's zoning is permissive (only listed uses are allowed) and transient lodging is not a listed use in residential zones, ADUs must be rented for at least six months, and renting rooms by the night fits the code's licensed rooming-house category. The township has publicly discussed a comprehensive STR ordinance since 2023, so hosts should confirm with the Zoning Office and watch for new legislation.
Do I need a permit or registration to run an STR in Montclair?
No STR-specific ordinance exists anywhere in the Township Code (legislation through 02-24-2026): no permit, license, registration, night cap, or ban aimed at short-term rentals generally.
What taxes apply to a short-term rental in Montclair, New Jersey?
Short-term stays in New Jersey are generally subject to NJ Sales Tax and the State Occupancy Fee (plus any local fees), unless collected for you by the booking platform. A tax professional can confirm what applies to your property.
Can Palisade Stays manage a short-term rental in Montclair?
Palisade Stays launches and runs short-term rentals for owners end to end. Where a short-term rental works in Montclair, we can handle setup, listing, guest operations, and turnovers. Start with a quick property-fit assessment.
Thinking about a short-term rental in Montclair?
Palisade Stays launches and runs short-term rentals for owners end to end. Tell us about your property and we'll see if it's a fit.
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