logo image

Corona, California

Regulations >
California >
Corona

Want to see how Corona compares to other top cities in California?  Explore all city regulations in California. →

D

Corona, CA

Unfriendly To Investors

Local STR Agent

Local STR Agent

Corona STR Expert
Corona, California skyline

STR Regulations for Corona, California

This guide consolidates the latest publicly available information on short-term rentals (STRs) in Corona, California. It is written for investors, hosts, property managers, and real estate professionals considering or currently operating STRs in Corona. The information is drawn from city news releases, ordinance announcements, and local reporting.

Overview: Are STRs allowed in Corona, California?

Explicit answer: No. As of October 18, 2023, the City of Corona adopted an urgency ordinance banning short-term residential rentals within city limits. The city ceased issuing new STR permits immediately and prohibited new STR operations. Existing permitted STRs may continue only until the expiration of their individual permits (as set by Urgency Ordinance No. 3382). No renewals are available. The ban is active now and ongoing. [1][2][3]

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Corona?

Corona hosts earn a median $22,375/year with $238 ADR and 65% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $44,887+ per year.

See the full Corona market breakdown →

How to start an STR business in Corona

Short answer: You cannot start a new STR business in Corona at this time. The city has prohibited new STRs, and no new permits are being issued. Existing permitted STRs can operate only until their permitted expiration date and cannot be renewed. Enforcement includes monitoring of hosting platforms, written notices, and escalating penalties for illegal operations. [1][2]

If you are an investor or host who previously held a permit:

  • Do not attempt to list or re-list properties for STR use once your permit expires. Continued operation after the expiration date is a violation. [1][2]
  • If your property is currently permitted, maintain compliance with any remaining conditions until your permit lapses. [1][2]

For owners considering STRs, Corona’s current legal climate makes new STR operations infeasible. Alternatives outside city limits (in other jurisdictions within Riverside County or adjacent counties) may be permissible, but those decisions must be based on separate jurisdiction-specific rules.

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

  • City STR Permit (STR Registration/Business License): Not available for new applications; existing permits that predated October 18, 2023, were permitted to continue until their expiration date. The city is not accepting renewals. [1][2]
  • Business License/TOT Registration: Corona historically required STR operators to register and collect/remit Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT). However, since no new permits are being issued and existing permits are expiring, no new TOT registrations are active. [1]
  • Zoning Compliance: STRs are not permitted in any residential zone within Corona while the ban is in effect. [1][2]
  • Operational Guidelines (for permitted STRs during wind-down): Historically, hosts were expected to comply with noise, parking, occupancy, and community conduct standards. The city also adopted a penalty schedule for violations (see below). [3]

Specific regulations for STRs in Corona, County, and State

City of Corona (Municipal Code Chapter 5.55)

  • Ban on New STRs: Urgency Ordinance No. 3380 amended Corona Municipal Code Chapter 5.55 to prohibit STRs. Effective immediately upon adoption (Oct 18, 2023), no new STR permits may be issued and no new STRs may operate. [1][2]
  • Existing Permit Wind-Down: Urgency Ordinance No. 3382 established an amortization period for previously permitted STRs. Those permits may continue to operate until their individual expiration date; renewals are not allowed. [1]
  • Monitoring and Enforcement: The city has retained a third-party service to identify STR listings on hosting platforms. Staff follow up with written notices and warnings, and violations are subject to escalating penalties. [3]
  • Penalty Schedule (updated): The city adopted a resolution increasing administrative penalties for illegally operating an STR:
    • First violation: $1,500 (previously $100)
    • Second violation: $3,000 (previously $200)
    • Third violation: $5,000 (previously $500) [3]

City ordinances were enacted via urgency ordinance procedures and became effective immediately upon adoption. Regular ordinances for the same policies took effect following a second council reading. [3]

Riverside County (County-Level STR Rules)

County-level rules (Riverside County) are separate and may differ from city rules. Corona-specific regulation applies within city limits. Properties located outside Corona but within unincorporated Riverside County may be subject to different county rules. This guide does not cover county-level requirements.

State of California (California STR Rules)

California does not impose a statewide ban on STRs. State law allows local governments to adopt their own STR regulations, which Corona has done by banning STRs within city limits. State tax requirements (such as Transient Occupancy Tax) are typically administered locally. Because no STRs may legally operate in Corona currently, new state-level requirements for hosts would not apply to new operations in this city.

Contact information for the local authority in charge of STRs

  • City of Corona — Planning and Development Department (Planning Division)
    • Address: 400 S. Vicentia Ave, Suite 120, Corona, CA 92880
    • Phone: 951-736-2262
    • Email: planning@coronaca.gov [4]
  • Hours: City Hall is open Monday–Thursday, 7 AM–6 PM; closed Friday [4]
  • Online Services: The city’s eTRAKiT portal provides permit search and other planning resources: etrakit.coronaca.gov/etrakit/ [5]

Links to source pages and documents

  • Corona Planning Division — STR Ban Announcement and Ordinance Notes: www.coronaca.gov/departments/planning-and-development/planning-division
  • Urgency Ordinance No. 3380 (Amending CMC Chapter 5.55 — Prohibiting STRs): cdn.prod.website-files.com/65799af8ef225180fdf1ba2e/65c132d1de7446ab04ec74ef_URGENCY%20ORDINANCE%20AMENDING%20CMC%20CHAPTER%205.55.docx
  • Urgency Ordinance No. 3382 (Amortization Period for Existing Permits): cdn.prod.website-files.com/65799af8ef225180fdf1ba2e/65c133d1b47307535698ac22_URGENCY%20UNCODIFIED%20ORDINANCE%20ESTABLISHING%20AMORTIZATION%20PERIOD.docx
  • The Riverside Record — “Corona Council Unanimously Votes To Ban Short-Term Residential Rentals” (Oct 23, 2023): riversiderecord.org/corona-council-unanimously-votes-to-ban-short-term-residential-rentals/
  • City of Corona — Permit Search/eTRAKiT: etrakit.coronaca.gov/etrakit/
  • City of Corona — City Council Meeting Video ( ordinance discussion/approval): corona.granicus.com/player/clip/1224?view_id=1&redirect=true&h=a0db5f02974b76a59500acef7eccd0c1

—

Notes:

  • The City’s official page states that no new STR permits will be issued and that existing permitted STRs may continue until their permit expires per the amortization ordinance. [1][2]
  • The Riverside Record provides coverage of the council vote, ban scope, penalties, and enforcement approach. [3]

Next step

Found a property in Corona?

Paste any address and get estimated revenue, cash-on-cash return, and comparable STR performance in under 5 minutes. 3 free analyses per day.

Ask the AI Advisor about Corona →

Free brief

Get the free Corona STR Investment Brief

Revenue data, top neighborhoods, seasonal trends, and the key regulations for Corona, California in one email.

Corona

Market Saturation Score

036912
Moderate Saturation
5/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
5–7 declining months: moderate saturation risk - market may be nearing capacity.
View Full Corona Market Analysis →

Photos of Corona

Overview of Corona

Corona (Spanish for "Crown") is a city in northwestern Riverside County, California, United States. At the 2020 census, the city had a population of 157,136, up from 152,374 at the 2010 census. Corona is surrounded by Norco to the north and northeast, Yorba Linda to the northwest, Cleveland National Forest and the Santa Ana Mountains to the west, southwest, and south. Several unincorporated communities are along the rest of the city's borders. Downtown Corona is approximately 48 miles (77 kilometers) southeast of Downtown Los Angeles and 95 miles (153 km) north-northwest of San Diego. Corona, located along the western edge of Southern California's Inland Empire region, is known as the "Circle City" due to Grand Boulevard's 3 mi (4.8 km) circular layout. It is one of the most residential cities in the Inland Empire, but also has a large industrial portion on the northern half, being the headquarters of companies such as Fender Musical Instruments Corporation, Monster Beverage Corporation, and supercar manufacturer Saleen.

Want to know if a property in Corona is a good investment?

Enter an address to get instant revenue potential and comps.

startup landing logo

Copyright © 2026 HomeRun Analytics, Inc

Explore

HomeCountry ExplorerProperty Analyzer

Resources

Market ComparatorRegulationsBlog

Trusted by STR investors in 50+ U.S. states

Built by investors, for investors

STRProfitMap® is a registered trademark of HomeRun Analytics, Inc