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Stuyvesant, New York

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Stuyvesant, NY

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Stuyvesant, New York skyline

STR Regulations for Stuyvesant, New York

Overview and bottom line: Yes — short-term rentals are allowed in the Town of Stuyvesant, NY. Local Law 2 of 2024 explicitly permits STRs (defined as lodging for 31 consecutive days or less), subject to a permitting and compliance regime designed to balance tourism income with the town’s rural/residential character. The law requires permits, inspections, occupancy limits, on-site parking, emergency contact standards, a local property manager for unhosted units, and annual renewals. NYC-level rules (e.g., NYC Rules: Registration and Requirements for Short-Term Rentals) do not apply to Stuyvesant unless you operate in NYC. State-level baseline requirements such as New York State Building Code and the State Sanitary Code apply via local enforcement.

How to start a short-term rental business in this market

  • Confirm property eligibility and define your STR type:
    • Hosted property: You reside on the STR parcel.
    • Unhosted property: You do not reside on the STR parcel; you must appoint a Local Property Manager (LPM) who lives within the town or within 30 road miles and is responsible for enforcement of rules and responding to complaints within 60 minutes.
  • Prepare the STR for inspection:
    • Occupancy per New York State Building Code based on bedrooms (and the maximum STR cap of 15 sleeping persons).
    • On-parcel parking (no guest/renter parking on roads).
    • Emergency number posted and responded to within 60 minutes.
    • Fire safety compliance (smoke/CO alarms, fire extinguisher; extinguisher certification annually).
    • Optional but recommended: hazard/liability insurance at least equal to the dwelling’s value plus $300,000 third-party coverage.
  • Assemble your application package:
    • Owner/operator details and property parcel(s).
    • LPM information (required for unhosted).
    • Proof of fire safety compliance (alarms/extinguisher certification).
    • Emergency contact number.
    • Insurance evidence (recommended).
    • Occupancy statement and floor plans or bedroom counts.
  • Submit to and coordinate with the Town Code Enforcement Officer (CEO):
    • Initial inspection within 30 days of a complete application; successful completion yields initial permit.
    • Permit term is one year; annual renewal required with fee as set by Town Board resolution.
    • Each tax parcel requires its own permit; if the STR spans multiple parcels, obtain a permit for each.
  • Initial permit timing:
    • Current operators must apply within 180 days of the law’s effective date; existing non-resident operators are subject to the same timeline.
    • New STRs cannot operate until the permit is issued post-inspection.
  • Register and maintain operations:
    • Display the 911 fire number (minimum 4-inch numerals) at the curb and emergency contact list indoors for Police/Fire/Poison Control (plus LPM contact if applicable).
    • For units with 5+ bedrooms: affix clear emergency exit route placards to the back of each bedroom door inside.
    • Ensure compliance with NY State Sanitary Code; notify guests of any failure and provide potable bottled water until remedied.

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

  • Permit:
    • Initial STR permit issued by the Town Code Enforcement Officer after inspection and within 30 days of a complete application; one-year term; renew annually with Town-set fee.
  • LPM (for unhosted STRs):
    • Name, address, phone number filed with the permit application; changes must be filed within five days.
  • Inspection items (initial and as required at renewal/change):
    • Occupancy limit per NY State Building Code and maximum 15 sleeping persons for STR classification.
    • Fire safety equipment and certification (alarms, extinguisher with annual certification).
    • Parking confined to the parcel; no road-side guest parking.
    • Posted emergency number and 60-minute response commitment.
    • Insurance proof (recommended minimum).
  • Fire safety compliance:
    • Smoke and CO alarms; fire extinguisher.
    • Annual extinguisher certification and an affidavit of continued compliance at each renewal.
  • Signage and display:
    • 911-Fire number at curb (≥4-inch numerals).
    • Indoor posted emergency contacts (Police/Fire/Poison Control) and LPM details if applicable.
    • Emergency exit placards for 5+ bedroom units.
  • NY State Sanitary Code:
    • Notify guests of any failure and provide bottled potable water until remedied.

Specific regulations (Town of Stuyvesant Local Law 2 of 2024)

  • Allowed use:
    • STRs are permitted, defined as lodging for 31 consecutive days or less, directly by the owner or via agent/platform.
    • STR classification cap: 15 or fewer sleeping persons; otherwise treated as a hotel/motel subject to hotel rules.
  • Occupancy and parking:
    • Occupancy per NY Building Code and capped at 15 for STRs.
    • No guest/renter/visitor parking on roads; all parking must be on the STR parcel.
  • Permit issuance and renewals:
    • Permits are issued to the property owner after inspection (30-day review window).
    • Annual renewal required; the CEO may request annual inspections and must inspect every three years.
    • Each parcel used in the STR requires its own permit.
  • LPM requirements (unhosted):
    • Must live within the town or within 30 road miles; must respond to complaints from the town/public within 60 minutes; contact info on file with the permit.
  • Sanitary standards:
    • NY State Sanitary Code failures require guest notification and potable bottled water until the issue is resolved.
  • Violations and penalties:
    • 30 days to remedy violations; three un-remedied violations in a calendar year result in revocation of the permit.
    • Enforcement ladder:
      1. Warning
      2. $500
      3. $1,000
      4. $1,500 (and so forth)
    • The CEO inspects after each violation.
  • Appeals:
    • Appeals go to the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) under Town Law §267-b(1) for interpretations; process mirrors that section.
  • Effective date:
    • Local Law 2 of 2024 took effect immediately.

Note on New York City rules vs Stuyvesant:

  • NYC’s “Registration and Requirements for Short-Term Rentals” (effective March 5, 2023) is administered by the Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement. It requires STR registration in NYC and prohibits booking services from processing unregistered listings. This rule governs NYC, not the Town of Stuyvesant. If your STR is within NYC’s five boroughs, you must follow NYC rules; outside NYC (e.g., Stuyvesant), you follow Town of Stuyvesant rules and NY State baseline codes. Stuyvesant investors should not rely on NYC STR frameworks.

Contact information for the local authority in charge of STRs

  • Authority:
    • Town of Stuyvesant Code Enforcement Officer (CEO).
  • Application and inspection pathway:
    • Submit the STR permit application and schedule inspection through the CEO. Renewal applications also route to the CEO.
  • General contact:
    • Town of Stuyvesant — Town Hall (general inquiries, obtaining CEO contact details, permit status):
      • Phone: Use the Town’s general phone line (contact via Town website).
      • Email/Website: General inquiries via Town website; specific permit contacts typically handled by the CEO/Code Enforcement.
  • Practical note:
    • Contact details for the CEO and application portal/forms are not specified in the provided documents. Inquire directly with the Town of Stuyvesant for the CEO’s email, phone, and application forms.
  • For comparison (NYC only, not Stuyvesant):
    • NYC Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement (OSE) — for NYC STR registration and enforcement:
      • Website: rules.cityofnewyork.us (as referenced in the NYC STR registration rule page).

Links to source pages

  • Town of Stuyvesant — Local Law 2 of 2024 (Regulating Short-Term Rentals):
    • stuyvesantny.us/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Local-Law-2-of-2024-Regulating-Short-Term-Rentals-Adopted.pdf
  • NYC Rules — Registration and Requirements for Short-Term Rentals (effective March 5, 2023):
    • rules.cityofnewyork.us/rule/registration-and-requirements-for-short-term-rentals/

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Stuyvesant?

Stuyvesant hosts earn a median $32,599/year with $156 ADR and 87% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $54,613+ per year.

See the full Stuyvesant market breakdown

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Stuyvesant

Market Saturation Score

036912
High Saturation
10/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
8–10 declining months: high saturation - supply likely outpacing demand.
View Full Stuyvesant Market Analysis

Photos of Stuyvesant

Overview of Stuyvesant

Stuyvesant is a small rural town in Columbia County in upstate New York, set along the west bank of the Hudson River just south of the capital region. With a population of roughly 2,000 residents, the town has a quiet, agricultural character defined by open farmland, river views, and a handful of historic hamlets. It is best known as a gateway to the greater Hudson Valley, an area prized for its rolling countryside, antique towns, orchards, vineyards, and nineteenth-century American art history. Stuyvesant sits about 20 miles south of Albany and roughly 130 miles north of New York City, placing it within an easy drive of both the state capital and the cultural attractions of the lower Hudson Valley.

One of the most distinctive nearby landmarks is Olana State Historic Site, the former home and studio of the Hudson River School painter Frederic Edwin Church. Perched on a hilltop with sweeping views of the Hudson River and the Catskill Mountains, the Persian-inspired mansion and its surrounding 250-acre landscape draw visitors year-round. The site is roughly 10 to 15 minutes north of Stuyvesant, just outside the city of Hudson, and pairs well with trips into Hudson's antique shops and dining scene.

A short drive east of Stuyvesant leads to Kinderhook, a colonial-era village associated with Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the United States. The Martin Van Buren National Historic Site, known as Lindenwald, preserves the president's farm and mansion and offers guided tours of the grounds and interiors. The village itself, with its broad main street, eighteenth-century homes, and the Luykas Van Alen House, is a pleasant stop for visitors interested in early American history.

For outdoor recreation, Lake Taghkanic State Park lies about 20 minutes southeast of Stuyvesant in the town of Ancram. The park centers on a 64-acre lake that offers swimming, fishing, canoeing, and a network of wooded trails, along with campgrounds and picnic areas that make it a popular warm-weather destination for families exploring the mid-Hudson region.

Stuyvesant's appeal as a base for short-term rentals lies in this combination of rural calm and cultural depth. Guests can spend their days visiting Olana, wandering Kinderhook's historic streets, paddling at Lake Taghkanic, or driving a short distance north to the riverfront city of Hudson, all while returning each evening to a quiet stretch of the Hudson Valley far from the noise of larger tourist hubs. For travelers who want to experience the natural beauty and history of upstate New York without giving up tranquility, Stuyvesant offers an inviting and well-located home base.

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