Short-term-rental rules
Can you Airbnb in Village of Elmsford, NY?
Researched and reviewed by Jake Lee, FounderCurrent as of July 2026How this atlas is maintained
Elmsford has no short-term-rental-specific law and its zoning does not define dwellings or "family" by length of stay, so renting a whole home short-term is not expressly barred. However, Village Code Ch. 265 requires a rental permit, issued only after a Code Enforcement inspection and an application filed at least 7 days before any new tenant occupies, for every rented dwelling unit, and hosted room rentals are capped at 2 boarders in an owner-occupied single-family home with no advertising on the premises. Dedicated transient lodging (hotel, motel, B&B, boardinghouse) is confined to business or R-3 districts and needs a village license.
What the rules say in Village of Elmsford
- No STR-specific ordinance exists anywhere in the Elmsford Village Code (verified through legislation of 04-08-2024; full chapter list scanned, including zoning, rental housing, hotels, and property maintenance chapters).
- Rental permit required (Ch. 265 Rental Housing Units, L.L. 4-1991): no rental housing unit, defined as "a dwelling unit intended for occupancy by one or more individuals," may be occupied until a rental permit is issued; the owner must apply at least 7 days before occupancy by a new tenant and pass Code Enforcement inspection; permits last 2 years, $50 fee, fines up to $500 (secs. 265-1 to 265-7). On its face this applies to short-term rentals and its per-new-tenant application process is practically hostile to high-turnover hosting.
- Room rentals (hosted STR): boarders are allowed only in owner-occupied detached single-family dwellings, max 2 boarders per dwelling, quarters may not have separate cooking facilities, the rented quarters may not be advertised on the premises, and one extra off-street parking space is required per boarder (zoning secs. 335-5B(2) and 335-6D).
- Residential zoning is permissive-list: in R-O/R-1 districts premises may be used only as "a single-family dwelling with one housekeeping unit only" plus listed accessory uses (sec. 335-5). The zoning definitions (sec. 335-3) define FAMILY broadly with no duration requirement and contain no "short-term rental," "transient," or "tourist home" definition, so there is no express zoning bar on transient occupancy of a dwelling.
- Dedicated transient lodging is a commercial use: "hotel (transient), motel (transient)" is permitted only in the Business District (sec. 335-9B); bed-and-breakfast (max 16 guest rooms) only in the Neighborhood Business District by special permit under sec. 335-23 (sec. 335-10.1); boardinghouses, dormitories, and lodging houses only in the R-3 district (sec. 335-7D).
- Anyone operating a building devoted exclusively or primarily to providing "overnight or temporary sleeping or housing accommodations for a consideration, to tourists, transients or travelers" must obtain an annual license from the Village Board of Trustees (Ch. 201, secs. 201-1 and 201-2), so a full-time dedicated whole-home STR risks being treated as an unlicensed tourist-lodge use outside the Business District.
- Caveat: the live eCode360 site is bot-blocked; zoning text was verified from an April 2025 archived copy (legislation through 04-08-2024) and Ch. 265 / Ch. 201 text from a 2014 archived copy (both chapters still appear in the 2025 code TOC). Confirm current text and any post-2024 amendments with the Elmsford Building Department before operating.
Sources: Village of Elmsford Code (eCode360, official codification); Elmsford Village Code Ch. 335 Zoning (live URL; Cloudflare-blocked to bots); Ch. 335 Zoning, archived Apr 2025 copy actually read (includes legislation through 04-08-2024); Elmsford Village Code Ch. 265 Rental Housing Units (live URL); Ch. 265 Rental Housing Units, archived copy actually read; Elmsford Village Code Ch. 201 Hotels, Motels and Tourist Lodges (live URL); Ch. 201 Hotels, Motels and Tourist Lodges, archived copy actually read; Village of Elmsford official website (searched; no STR-specific pages found). Last reviewed 2026-07.
How short-term rentals are regulated in New York
- New York has no single statewide short-term-rental ban. Towns, villages, and cities set their own rules through local ordinances and zoning, so rules can differ sharply between neighboring municipalities in the same county.
- Short stays in New York are generally subject to state and local sales tax, and many counties add a local occupancy (hotel/motel) tax, often collected by the booking platform on the host's behalf.
- Common local controls include permits or registration, primary-residence requirements, and zoning limits on which districts allow short-term use. In New York, a town and a village inside it can each have their own rule.
- Rules change. An ordinance can be added or amended at any time. Always confirm the current rule with the municipality before listing.
Village of Elmsford short-term-rental FAQ
Can I run a short-term rental (Airbnb) in Village of Elmsford, NY?
Elmsford has no short-term-rental-specific law and its zoning does not define dwellings or "family" by length of stay, so renting a whole home short-term is not expressly barred. However, Village Code Ch. 265 requires a rental permit, issued only after a Code Enforcement inspection and an application filed at least 7 days before any new tenant occupies, for every rented dwelling unit, and hosted room rentals are capped at 2 boarders in an owner-occupied single-family home with no advertising on the premises. Dedicated transient lodging (hotel, motel, B&B, boardinghouse) is confined to business or R-3 districts and needs a village license.
Do I need a permit or registration to run an STR in Village of Elmsford?
Rental permit required (Ch. 265 Rental Housing Units, L.L. 4-1991): no rental housing unit, defined as "a dwelling unit intended for occupancy by one or more individuals," may be occupied until a rental permit is issued; the owner must apply at least 7 days before occupancy by a new tenant and pass Code Enforcement inspection; permits last 2 years, $50 fee, fines up to $500 (secs. 265-1 to 265-7). On its face this applies to short-term rentals and its per-new-tenant application process is practically hostile to high-turnover hosting.
What taxes apply to a short-term rental in Village of Elmsford, New York?
Short-term stays in New York are generally subject to state and local sales tax, and many counties add a local occupancy (hotel) tax, often 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 Village of Elmsford?
Palisade Stays launches and runs short-term rentals for owners end to end. Where a short-term rental works in Village of Elmsford, we can handle setup, listing, guest operations, and turnovers. Start with a quick property-fit assessment.
Thinking about a short-term rental in Village of Elmsford?
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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