Registry data reveals a significant disconnect between the perception of local hosts supplementing income and the reality of ownership patterns.
The Town of Stowe will fundamentally reshape its short-term rental market on May 1, 2026, when new regulations take effect that cap the number of properties that can be rented to tourists and require that registration rights expire when properties are sold.
The Stowe Selectboard voted in December 2025 to move forward with ordinance amendments that represent one of Vermont’s most aggressive municipal responses to the tension between tourism revenue and workforce housing availability.
The regulations will prohibit new short-term rental registrations after the May 1 deadline and prevent existing registrations from transferring to new owners when properties are sold—unless those new owners occupy the property as their primary residence. Certain resort developments, including ski-area planned unit developments and resort PUDs, will be exempt from the restrictions.
The Housing Data Driving Change
Stowe’s regulatory shift is anchored in a specific data point: the town lost 98 properties that had been primary residences—what Vermont calls “homesteads”—to the short-term rental market between 2012 and 2024. This figure comes from tracking properties that shifted from claiming Vermont’s homestead tax rate, available only for primary residences, to non-residential tax status.
“We’re losing kids, not just homesteads,” Selectboard member Beth Gadbois noted during public discussions of the regulations. The town’s Housing Needs Assessment documents that homestead units as a portion of all housing units dropped by 9.7 percentage points during this period, indicating Stowe is becoming less residential and more commercial in character.
Who Owns Stowe’s Short-Term Rentals
Registry data reveals a significant disconnect between the perception of local hosts supplementing income and the reality of ownership patterns. Only 196 of 891 registered properties—approximately 22%—listed a Stowe mailing address as of mid-2024. Nearly as many properties, 260, were registered to owners with Massachusetts mailing addresses.
The proposed regulations specifically include language allowing primary residents to continue registering short-term rentals, meaning the restrictions primarily affect the 78% of current registrants who do not live in Stowe. Verification of primary residence status would be tied to Vermont’s Homestead Declaration form, voter registration, and driver’s licenses.
How the “Cap and Attrit” System Works
The regulatory mechanism Stowe has designed relies on time and attrition rather than immediate prohibition. The May 1, 2026 deadline creates a cutoff point: no new registrations will be accepted after that date in residential zones. More significantly, the right to operate a short-term rental will not transfer with property sales. When a current short-term rental owner sells their property, the registration expires unless the new owner occupies it as a primary residence and chooses to continue operating it as a rental.
This “attrition” mechanism means the inventory of short-term rentals in neighborhoods will decline gradually over time as properties change hands, theoretically returning units to the residential market or to owner-occupiers. The approach removes the future rental income stream from a property’s resale value, which property management advocates argue will significantly reduce property values, while housing advocates contend will restore affordability.
The Resort Zone Exemption Strategy
Stowe’s regulations distinguish between properties in resort developments and those in residential neighborhoods. Ski-area planned unit developments and resort PUDs like Spruce Peak and Topnotch Resort will be exempt from the cap and transfer restrictions.
The rationale is that these developments were originally permitted and built specifically for transient lodging rather than year-round residency, functioning essentially as hotels with individually owned units. By exempting them, the town is directing commercial lodging activity to zones designed for that purpose while protecting residential neighborhoods from conversion to de facto hotel use.
Correspondence from Nicholas Mayer, General Counsel for AWH Partners (owners of Topnotch Resort), explicitly requested that resort PUDs receive treatment similar to ski PUDs, and the Selectboard incorporated this exemption into the draft amendments.
Industry Opposition and Economic Arguments
The Vermont Short-Term Rental Alliance, an industry advocacy group, has characterized the ordinance as a “serious threat to all current and future property owners” that will “fundamentally change property values”. Property managers and second-home owners have raised concerns about the suppression of asset values and tourism revenue.
Industry advocates note that short-term rentals already pay the state’s 9% Rooms and Meals Tax plus an additional 3% Short-Term Rental Surcharge implemented in August 2024, and contribute an estimated $1 billion annually to Vermont’s economy. However, these tax payments address fiscal regulation rather than land-use zoning, which towns maintain authority over through municipal planning processes.
The counter-argument from regulation supporters is that the revenue figures don’t account for the economic costs of the housing crisis, including labor shortages affecting businesses—including property management companies themselves—because workers cannot afford to live in resort communities.
Vermont’s Broader Short-Term Rental Landscape
Stowe is not alone in grappling with short-term rental regulation. Vermont municipalities have adopted widely varying approaches based on their distinct identities and housing pressures. The following table shows how five communities have addressed the issue:
The Killington Contrast
Killington, Vermont’s other major ski destination, has taken an opposite approach from Stowe. With over 2,000 registered short-term rentals, Killington essentially functions as lodging infrastructure for the resort, with regulations focused on safety measures like fire codes, Knox Boxes for emergency access, and occupancy limits rather than supply restriction.
The divergence between these two major resort towns reflects different visions: Killington has accepted its role as a lodging engine for the ski industry, while Stowe is attempting to maintain its identity as a functioning year-round community with schools, local workforce, and residential neighborhoods distinct from its resort operations.
State Legislative Activity
While municipalities have taken the lead on regulation, the Vermont Legislature has begun addressing short-term rentals at the state level, though with a focus on enabling housing construction rather than restricting rentals.
S.100 (Act 47), passed in the 2023-2024 session, removed zoning barriers to encourage housing density, facilitating construction of duplexes and accessory dwelling units. However, the law does not prevent newly constructed units from becoming short-term rentals, leading municipalities like Stowe to fear that new housing supply would simply be absorbed by the rental market.
For the 2025-2026 session, lawmakers have introduced H.242, which represents a more restrictive approach. The bill proposes a “One Host, One Rental” rule limiting each person to one short-term rental per parcel, and contemplates host-occupancy requirements. Interestingly, the bill would allow municipalities to exempt themselves from these restrictions, reversing the current dynamic where short-term rentals are permitted unless locally banned. The bill would also create a statewide registry to replace the current patchwork of municipal systems.
The Statewide Housing Context
Vermont’s short-term rental debates occur against a backdrop of acute housing shortage. The Vermont Housing Finance Agency’s 2025 needs assessment estimates the state needs 24,000 to 36,000 additional homes by 2029. The statewide rental vacancy rate stands at 3%, with Chittenden County at just 1%.
This creates what housing analysts call a vacancy paradox: severe shortages of long-term housing alongside high numbers of properties that sit empty for extended periods as short-term rentals. The 3% surcharge on short-term rentals is projected to generate $65 million in 2025, but in luxury markets like Stowe, the tax has not significantly deterred demand or supply growth, prompting municipalities to turn to zoning restrictions.
Enforcement Mechanisms
Stowe’s draft regulations include specific enforcement tools. The town recommends requiring that town-issued registration numbers appear in all online advertisements, allowing officials to use software to scan platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo for illegal listings. The requirement for a designated responsible person who can respond on-site within 45 minutes remains in place to address noise and parking complaints.
What Happens Next
The Stowe Selectboard’s December 2025 vote instructed the Town Manager to draft final ordinance language for the May 1, 2026 implementation. Property owners who currently operate short-term rentals can continue doing so through the April 30, 2026 registration renewal deadline. After May 1, 2026, the number of registered short-term rentals in residential zones will be frozen at that level, and those registrations will begin expiring as properties are sold.
At the state level, H.242 will move through the legislative process during the 2025-2026 session, with committee hearings likely to draw testimony from both housing advocates and the tourism industry. If passed, the bill would establish a default regulatory framework statewide while allowing municipalities to opt out or impose stricter local controls.
For other Vermont municipalities watching Stowe’s approach, the key question is whether aggressive local regulation can successfully rebalance housing markets without simply displacing tourism activity to neighboring communities—a phenomenon that would validate the need for comprehensive state-level frameworks rather than town-by-town solutions.

