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Craig, Alaska

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Craig, AK

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STR Regulations for Craig, Alaska

Overview: Are short-term rentals allowed in Craig, AK?

  • Allowed, but regulated: Short-term rentals are generally permitted in Craig, Alaska as of 2025, provided the property is compliant with zoning, building, fire, health, and any homeowners’ association (HOA) covenants. The City of Craig appears to have no published, city-specific short-term rental licensing or zoning ordinance in the sources provided. In Alaska, municipal authority to regulate STRs derives from home rule and general law powers; without specific local STR rules, investors must comply with general zoning, safety, business licensing, and state/federal tax requirements. If your property sits within an HOA or condo association, you must also follow its restrictive covenants. A majority of U.S. courts interpreting “residential use only” or “no commercial use” covenants have held that short-term rentals do not violate such restrictions absent clear language prohibiting rentals or setting minimum rental durations. However, courts have sometimes found violations when operations are frequent, income-focused, and business-like (e.g., high turnover, advertising, commercial insurance, LLC structure). See Source 1 (NLRG).

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Craig?

Craig hosts earn a median $21,142/year with $182 ADR and 52% occupancy.

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How to start an STR business in Craig, AK

  • Confirm zoning: Verify with the City Clerk (or the City’s planning/code official) that your property is in a zone where transient lodging is an allowed use. Most residential zones allow occasional lodging, but commercial or short-term rental-specific uses can be restricted or require conditional use approval.
  • Review HOA/condo covenants: Obtain the recorded covenants and rules. Confirm whether short-term rentals are prohibited or limited by rental duration, frequency, or owner-occupancy. If the documents are silent on STRs, the majority rule allows them under “residential use” covenants, but you should avoid business-like features (frequent turnover, aggressive advertising, commercial insurance, LLC structures) unless the covenant clearly permits them.
  • Secure required authorizations:
    • City business license/registration (if applicable).
    • Local/regional sales tax account and transient occupancy tax (TOT)/bed tax registration with the Municipality of Prince of Wales–Hyder (county equivalent for tax administration). If the municipality does not collect a TOT, check for any regional bed tax applicable to Prince of Wales–Hyder or adjacent areas; TOT frameworks vary locally in Alaska.
  • Obtain safety and capacity compliance:
    • Follow building, electrical, plumbing, and life safety codes applicable to transient lodging (e.g., smoke/CO detectors, egress, fire extinguishers, handrails, safe occupancy limits).
    • Complete health and sanitation checks for potable water, wastewater, and solid waste if required by local code.
    • Confirm utilities serviceability (especially rural water/septic).
  • Taxes and insurance:
    • File for federal EIN; register an Alaska tax account (sales/use tax) with the Department of Revenue, and any local TOT/bed tax account.
    • Secure appropriate insurance. Avoid policies or terms that imply “commercial hotel” operations if your covenants rely on “residential use” language; some insurers may classify STRs as commercial lodging.
  • Market responsibly:
    • Avoid false advertising; include cancellation, pet, occupancy, and amenity policies that are clear and accurate.
  • Operations and guest management:
    • Collect and remit applicable taxes, maintain guest records, respond to guest complaints, and address neighborhood relations to reduce enforcement risk.
  • Monitoring:
    • Track any updates from the City and state; Alaska municipalities periodically amend regulations on STRs.

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

Given the absence of city-specific STR rules in the provided sources, expect to prepare and maintain the following:

  • Property and zoning:
    • Property deed/mobile home certificate of title.
    • Zoning confirmation letter or determination from the City (to confirm lodging is a permitted use).
  • Business:
    • City business license/registration (if required).
    • Federal EIN; Alaska tax account number (sales/use tax) from Department of Revenue.
  • Local/regional taxes:
    • Transient occupancy tax (TOT)/bed tax account registration and monthly/quarterly filings with the Municipality of Prince of Wales–Hyder (or the appropriate regional tax authority).
  • Safety and capacity:
    • Life-safety compliance (smoke detectors, CO detectors, fire extinguishers, egress, handrails, safe occupancy).
    • Building/electrical/plumbing inspections as required for lodging use (if any).
    • Wastewater/water supply compliance for transient lodging; confirm septic/well capacity and any Health Department requirements for non-municipal systems.
    • Emergency contact/“renter’s notice” postings and maintenance logs per local code.
  • Insurance:
    • General liability and property insurance appropriate for transient lodging; consider endorsements for short-term rental exposures.
  • HOA/condo documentation:
    • Recorded covenants and any rules/architectural guidelines; written confirmation that your STR plan does not violate covenants (especially if relying on the residential-use interpretation).
  • Guest-facing items:
    • House rules, safety instructions, occupancy limits, cancellation/refund policies, local contact information.
  • Recordkeeping:
    • Guest logs, booking records, tax remittance documentation, incident reports, and routine maintenance records to demonstrate compliance.

Specific regulations for short-term rentals (city, county, state)

  • City of Craig:
    • No published short-term rental-specific ordinance was identified in the provided sources. Proceed under general zoning, business licensing, safety, and tax rules. Contact the City Clerk for zoning confirmation and any pending or draft STR regulations.
  • Prince of Wales–Hyder Census Area (municipal tax administration):
    • TOT/bed tax registration and remittance likely apply even absent city-specific rules; confirm with the Municipality of Prince of Wales–Hyder (phone/email below). The State of Alaska does not impose a statewide TOT; TOTs are local options.
  • State of Alaska:
    • Statewide short-term rental licensing/permitting is not identified in the provided sources.
    • Sales/use tax: Alaska allows local-option sales tax under AS 29.45.650; operation of a transient lodging business may trigger sales tax obligations. Register with the Department of Revenue and comply with filing requirements. The state does not impose a sales tax itself.
    • Zoning and land use: Municipalities in Alaska regulate land use via home rule and general law powers. Without city STR rules, default zoning and safety codes apply to lodging uses.
    • Health and life safety: Transient lodging must meet applicable building, fire, and health standards. Confirm requirements with the City and any regional health authority.
    • HOAs and residential-use covenants: Many restrictive covenants prohibit “commercial use” or restrict use to “residential.” A majority of courts conclude STRs do not violate “residential use only” covenants unless covenants explicitly set rental duration limits or ban transient rentals. Nonetheless, operating in a business-like fashion increases risk (e.g., frequent turnover, advertising, LLC ownership, commercial insurance). See Source 1 (NLRG).
  • Federal:
    • Immigration: No-Sofa Surfing applies. U.S. citizens and certain non-citizens may host guests for pay without E‑Verify if only lodging is provided. If you employ staff at the STR (housekeeping, management), E‑Verify generally applies for covered employers. Consult the Department of Homeland Security E‑Verify rules.
    • Fair Housing: Ensure compliance with federal and state fair housing laws (no discriminatory screening, advertising, or treatment).

Contact information (local authority)

  • City of Craig
    • Address: 511 Second Street, Craig, AK 99921
    • Phone: +1 (907) 826-3275
    • Email: not provided in sources
    • Website: not provided in sources
    • Contact purpose: zoning confirmation, business licensing, building/fire compliance, and to inquire about any draft or pending STR regulations.
  • Municipality of Prince of Wales–Hyder (county-equivalent tax administration)
    • Address: not identified in sources
    • Phone: +1 (907) 826-3421 (municipal contact for Prince of Wales–Hyder, as listed in sources)
    • Email: not provided in sources
    • Website: not provided in sources
    • Contact purpose: TOT/bed tax account setup, filing instructions, and collection rules.
  • Alaska Department of Revenue (Tax Division)
    • Address/phone/website: not identified in sources
    • Contact purpose: sales/use tax registration and compliance for lodging operations.

Links to source pages (provided)

  • www.nlrg.com/legal-content/the-lawletter/property-short-term-rentals-and-hoa-residential-use-only-covenants (Source 1: Residential-use covenants and STRs; case-law majority rule; HOA considerations.)
  • www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/vacation-towns-limit-short-term-rentals-amid-housing-crisis (Source 2: National context on STR regulation, with mentions of Steamboat Springs, CO, and a resident’s experience commuting from Craig.)

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Craig

Market Saturation Score

036912
Mild Saturation
2/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
2–4 declining months: early saturation pressure - watch for trend persistence.
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Photos of Craig

Overview of Craig

Craig (Tlingit: Sháan Séet) is a city in the Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area in the Unorganized Borough in the U.S. state of Alaska. The population was 1,036 at the 2020 census, down from 1,201 in 2010.

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