Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill14564
If the home is being used as an AirBnB then tax is due. If it has not been collected in the past then perhaps the new bill will change that.
Renting the home is certainly a business activity. However, renting a home does not mean business is being conducted in the home. The activities being conducted in the home are eating, sleeping, cooking, and cleaning. These are the exact same activities that are conducted in my home and 70,000+ other homes in the Villages.
Further, even if the owner sat in the kitchen and accepted payment such that business activity was occurring in the home, it would still not be a violation of the deed restrictions. The deed restrictions prohibit business activity that involves maintaining inventory or customer visits. The sofa and kitchen table in the airBnB is no more inventory than the sofa and kitchen table in my home. The people sitting on the sofa and eating at the kitchen table are not customers visiting a business, they are guests performing the normal activities conducted in a home: eating, sleeping, cooking, and cleaning.
What some seem to want is for local government to pass a law prohibiting an owner from renting his home or a law mandating a minimum duration of a stay. (Un)fortunately, Florida law does not allow a local government to pass such a law.
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That Florida law has a date of enforcement on it and some homes in the Northern section don't fall under that Florida law.
2/3 of my CYV block is STR and has totally lost any neighborhood feel. It's more like a resort or time share than a community.
It's chasing year round residents out and more STR in which the whole block will eventually be 100% STR.
How is it condominiums in Florida are able to implement restrictions on STR but not TV?