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Laveen, Arizona

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Laveen, AZ

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STR Regulations for Laveen, Arizona

Short-Term Rental (STR) Regulatory Guide for Laveen, Arizona

Overview: Are Short-Term Rentals Allowed in Laveen?

Explicit answer: Yes—short-term rentals are allowed in Laveen, Arizona. Laveen is an unincorporated community within Maricopa County; it does not have its own municipal short-term rental ordinance. As a result, STR operations in Laveen are governed by state-level Arizona statutes (A.R.S. § 9-500.39) and any applicable county-level rules. The sources provided do not include Maricopa County’s specific STR regulations; therefore, this guide focuses on the state-level requirements and the permitting/tax framework that applies broadly across Arizona. Always confirm any county-specific rules directly with Maricopa County.

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Laveen hosts earn a median $28,200/year with $204 ADR and 62% occupancy.

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How to Start a Short-Term Rental Business in Laveen

Because Laveen is not a city with its own STR permitting system, your legal pathway is anchored in Arizona state law. Your core compliance steps are:

  • Obtain an Arizona Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) license from the Arizona Department of Revenue. This is required before you rent your property to transient guests. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(5)(c)].
  • Register and update your property’s status with the Maricopa County Assessor’s Office so the property is appropriately classified for tax purposes and occupancy status.
  • Collect and remit state Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) and any county excise tax on your gross rental receipts. Your TPT license authorizes tax collection and filing.
  • Comply with the statutory requirements of A.R.S. § 9-500.39, which sets the baseline rules that cities and towns may further regulate; in unincorporated Laveen, these state rules are your primary obligations (unless Maricopa County has adopted its own rules not captured in the sources).

Practical takeaway: Treat your Arizona TPT license and tax compliance as your operational foundation. The STR-specific state rules—such as advertisement disclosures, contact information, and anti-nuisance restrictions—must be followed as well.

Required Documents, Permits, Licenses, and Guidelines

The sources provided do not include Laveen-specific or Maricopa County-specific forms. At the state level, Arizona requires the following from STR owners:

  • Arizona TPT License (from AZ Department of Revenue) — authorizes collection and remittance of TPT on transient rentals.
  • Emergency Contact Information for the owner or owner’s designee, who must respond in a timely manner before offering the STR for rent (in person if required by public safety personnel, by phone or email at any hour). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(4)].
  • Advertisement Disclosure — display your TPT license number on each STR advertisement (if your jurisdiction does not require a separate local permit/license). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(7)].
  • Proof of Compliance — proof of TPT license status is required if any local permit/license is conditioned on it. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(5)(c)].
  • Acknowledgment and Agreement — you must acknowledge agreement to comply with applicable laws, regulations, and ordinances. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(5)(e)].
  • Liability Insurance — maintain liability insurance with aggregate coverage of at least $500,000, or ensure your listing is offered through an online lodging marketplace providing equal or greater coverage. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(8)].
  • Sex Offender Notification — if your county or city requires background checks for guests, the requirement must be waived if the online marketplace performs the check. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(E)].

Important: Cities and towns can require a local permit/license up to $250, but this requirement only applies within incorporated municipalities. Since Laveen is unincorporated, you do not need a city STR permit. Maricopa County may have additional requirements; the provided sources do not include them.

Specific Regulations for Short-Term Rentals (State, County, City)

Arizona State Regulations (A.R.S. § 9-500.39)

  • Non-Prohibition: Cities and towns may not prohibit vacation rentals or short-term rentals. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(A)].
  • Allowed Regulatory Scope (applied consistently with other similar property uses):
    • Public health and safety rules (fire, building, health and sanitation, traffic control, solid/hazardous waste, pollution). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(1)].
    • Use and zoning ordinances, including noise, welfare protection, property maintenance, and nuisance ordinances applied the same as for other similar properties. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(2)].
    • Prohibitions on certain uses: housing sex offenders; sober living homes; selling illegal drugs; liquor control; pornography/indecent entertainment; adult-oriented businesses. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(3)].
    • Owner or designee emergency contact information, with civil penalty up to $1,000 for every 30 days of non-compliance after 30-day notice. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(4)].
    • Local permits/licenses (up to $250 fee, seven-day decision requirement) and narrowly scoped application requirements (owner/agent info, STR address, TPT proof, contact info, acknowledgement). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(5)].
    • Neighbor notification before first offering for rent, with attestation to the municipality documenting compliance. In multifamily buildings, notification to residents on the same floor suffices. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(6)].
    • Advertisement requirements: show the local permit/license number, or if none is required, the TPT license number. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(7)].
    • Liability insurance requirement ($500,000 aggregate minimum), or coverage through an online lodging marketplace. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(8)].
    • Owner-residency requirement for properties with accessory dwelling units (ADUs) that received final approval on or after September 14, 2024; does not apply to ADUs approved on or before September 13, 2024. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(B)(9)].
  • Permit Processing: Seven business days to issue or deny, with defined denial grounds (incomplete application, fee non-payment, suspended permit/license, false information, or the owner/designee being a registered sex offender or having certain recent felony convictions). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(C)].
  • Administrative Suspension: Cities/towns that issue permits may initiate an administrative process to suspend a permit for up to 12 months for verified violations (e.g., three verified violations in 12 months; specified felonies or serious incidents). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(D)].
  • Civil Penalties (for verified violations within a 12-month period):
    • First violation: up to $500 or one night’s rent (whichever is greater).
    • Second violation: up to $1,000 or two nights’ rent (whichever is greater).
    • Third and subsequent violations: up to $3,500 or three nights’ rent (whichever is greater). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(F)].
  • Operation Cessation and Additional Penalties: Failure to apply for a required local permit/license within 30 days of the application process being available triggers cessation of operations and potential monthly penalties up to $1,000. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(G)].
  • Verified Violation Aggregation: Multiple violations arising from the same incident are counted as one for penalty and suspension purposes. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(H)].
  • Citation Notice: Cities/towns must make a reasonable attempt to notify the owner/designee within seven business days after issuing a citation if contact information was provided. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(I)].
  • Residential Rental Property Reporting: STR owners must still maintain county-assessor-reported information as required under Title 33. [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(J)].
  • Nonresidential Use Prohibition: STRs may not be used for nonresidential purposes (e.g., special events requiring a permit/license; retail, restaurant, banquet space). [A.R.S. § 9-500.39(K)].

Maricopa County

The provided sources do not include Maricopa County’s STR regulations. If county rules exist, they may add local requirements beyond state law (e.g., neighborhood notification standards, additional occupancy or safety standards, or a local permit system for unincorporated areas). Investors should confirm with Maricopa County’s planning/zoning or code enforcement offices.

City of Phoenix

Phoenix-specific regulations apply only within Phoenix city limits and are not applicable to Laveen, which is outside Phoenix jurisdiction. If you evaluate Phoenix properties in addition to Laveen, note that Phoenix requires:

  • A short-term rental permit (permit fee $250).
  • Neighbor notice by certified mail to adjacent properties and registered associations within 600 feet.
  • Permit number on advertisements.
  • Enhanced civil penalties and enforcement by the Neighborhood Services Department. [Phoenix STR Registry; Municipal Code § 10-195; Steadily article (contextual only)]

Contact Information (Phone, Email, Website)

Because Laveen is governed at the state and county level, use the following authoritative contacts for core obligations:

  • Arizona Department of Revenue (TPT License and Tax Filing)

    • Website: azdor.gov/business/transaction-privilege-tax
    • Phone: Not provided in the sources
  • Maricopa County Assessor (Property Status Updates)

    • Website: mcassessor.maricopa.gov/
    • Phone: Not provided in the sources
  • Neighborhood Organizations Search (context for any neighbor outreach you choose to conduct proactively)

    • City of Phoenix tool: nsdonline.phoenix.gov/NeighborhoodOrgs/ByAddress

Important: The provided sources do not include Maricopa County STR enforcement or code compliance contacts. If you need county-specific permitting or enforcement information, contact Maricopa County directly.

Links to Source Pages

  • Phoenix Short-Term Rental Registry — www.phoenix.gov/administration/departments/pdd/registration-licensing/short-term-rental-registry.html
  • Phoenix City Code § 10-195 — phoenix.municipal.codes/CC/10-195
  • Arizona Revised Statutes § 9-500.39 — www.azleg.gov/ars/9/00500-39.htm
  • Arizona Department of Revenue — Transaction Privilege Tax — azdor.gov/business/transaction-privilege-tax
  • Maricopa County Assessor’s Office — mcassessor.maricopa.gov/
  • Neighborhood Organizations Search (Phoenix) — nsdonline.phoenix.gov/NeighborhoodOrgs/ByAddress

Note: Laveen-specific municipal regulations do not exist because Laveen is unincorporated. The Phoenix sources are included to illustrate municipal-level controls that apply only inside Phoenix, not to Laveen.


If you are considering properties in Phoenix as well, consult the Phoenix STR permit process and enforcement structure. For Laveen, your compliance strategy should prioritize obtaining and maintaining your Arizona TPT license, staying current on all state statutory requirements, and confirming any Maricopa County rules with the county directly.

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Laveen

Market Saturation Score

036912
Low Saturation
1/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
0–1 declining months: minimal saturation pressure — revenue trends are stable.
View Full Laveen Market Analysis →

Photos of Laveen

Overview of Laveen

Laveen ( lə-VEEN) is a community in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States, situated eight miles (13 km) southwest of Downtown Phoenix, between South Mountain and the confluence of the Gila and Salt rivers. Parts of Laveen constitute an unincorporated community in Maricopa County, while the remainder falls within the city limits of Phoenix, constituting the city's "Laveen Village" an urban village within the city of Phoenix. Laveen Village is split between District 7 and District 8, both notable as minority-majority districts for the city. Although Laveen has been home to "pastoral alfalfa, cotton, and dairy farms" since the 1880s, housing and commercial developments have been increasingly urbanizing the area.

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