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Short-term-rental rules

Can you Airbnb in Livingston, NJ?

Short-term rentals allowed

Researched and reviewed by Jake Lee, FounderCurrent as of July 2026How this atlas is maintained

Livingston Township has no short-term-rental ordinance, no rental license, and nothing in its code addressing rentals under 30 nights, so STRs are legal by default. Owners must still register a $500,000 liability-insurance certificate with the Township annually (Ch. 327, a general rental-unit rule), and the zoning code's one-family occupancy definitions (max 3 unrelated persons as a single housekeeping unit) effectively limit large unrelated-group bookings.

What the rules say in Livingston

  • No STR-specific ordinance, permit, registration, or license exists anywhere in the Code of the Township of Livingston; rentals under 30 consecutive nights are not addressed.
  • Zoning is permissive (Sec. 170-87D: no land or building may be used for any purpose other than a purpose permitted in the zone district), and R-1 through R-4 districts permit single-family residential use; however the code contains no transient-occupancy exclusion, no minimum-stay language, and no hotel/boardinghouse/rooming-house definitions that would sweep in STRs, so short-term dwelling rental is not distinguished from any other residential rental.
  • Occupancy limits still apply: a DWELLING UNIT is limited to occupancy by one family, and FAMILY caps unrelated occupants at up to three persons living privately as a single housekeeping unit (Ch. 170 Art. II Definitions), which constrains large groups of unrelated STR guests.
  • Every rental-unit owner must maintain liability insurance of at least $500,000 and annually register the certificate of insurance with the Township ($30 fee; fines $500-$5,000 for noncompliance) under Ch. 327, Liability Insurance for Business Owners and Rental Unit Owners (implementing the 2022 NJ state insurance-registration law).
  • General habitability rules apply to rentals: Ch. 162 Housing Standards (unfit buildings, heating, lead-based-paint inspection of rental dwellings) and Ch. 227 Property Maintenance.
  • Motels are a conditional use only on a small Route 10 commercial strip (Ch. 170 Art. XI); no hotel/transient lodging use is permitted in residence districts.
  • State-level obligations apply independently of the Township: New Jersey imposes sales tax and the state occupancy fee on transient accommodations (collected by marketplaces like Airbnb when booked through them).

Sources: Code of the Township of Livingston, NJ - full table of contents (eCode360); Ch. 170 Land Use, Art. II Definitions (no hotel/transient/STR terms; FAMILY and DWELLING UNIT definitions); Ch. 170 Sec. 170-87 General zoning requirements (permissive-use clause 170-87D); Ch. 170 Art. XII District Regulations (permitted uses in R-1 to R-6 residence districts); Ch. 170 Land Use - chapter table of contents; Ch. 162 Housing Standards (no rental licensing, no STR provisions); Ch. 227 Property Maintenance (no rental registration); Ch. 327 Liability Insurance for Business Owners and Rental Unit Owners (annual insurance-certificate registration for rental units); Ordinance 12-2024 (new-tenant certificates limited to non-residential buildings; not STR-related); Livingston Township ordinances and resolutions portal. 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.

Livingston short-term-rental FAQ

Can I run a short-term rental (Airbnb) in Livingston, NJ?

Livingston Township has no short-term-rental ordinance, no rental license, and nothing in its code addressing rentals under 30 nights, so STRs are legal by default. Owners must still register a $500,000 liability-insurance certificate with the Township annually (Ch. 327, a general rental-unit rule), and the zoning code's one-family occupancy definitions (max 3 unrelated persons as a single housekeeping unit) effectively limit large unrelated-group bookings.

Do I need a permit or registration to run an STR in Livingston?

No STR-specific ordinance, permit, registration, or license exists anywhere in the Code of the Township of Livingston; rentals under 30 consecutive nights are not addressed.

What taxes apply to a short-term rental in Livingston, 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 Livingston?

Palisade Stays launches and runs short-term rentals for owners end to end. Where a short-term rental works in Livingston, we can handle setup, listing, guest operations, and turnovers. Start with a quick property-fit assessment.

Thinking about a short-term rental in Livingston?

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.