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Prather, California

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Prather

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Prather, CA

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STR Regulations for Prather, California

Overview: Are STRs allowed in Prather, CA?

Explicit answer: Prather is an unincorporated community within Fresno County. There are no city-specific STR regulations in the materials provided. Therefore, STRs in Prather are governed by county-level rules (if any) and by California state law. If Fresno County has adopted an STR ordinance, it will control; absent a county-wide ordinance, state statutes and standard civil/property law rules apply.

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Prather hosts earn a median $24,886/year with $235 ADR and 46% occupancy.

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How to start a STR business in this market (Fresno County context)

  1. Confirm property status
  • Verify that your property is not subject to deed restrictions, HOA covenants, or CC&Rs that prohibit STRs.
  • Confirm it is a lawful residential dwelling unit (no unpermitted conversions or accessory structure use).
  1. Check local zoning and permits
  • Because Prather is unincorporated, permitted use status, setbacks, parking, and signage will be determined by Fresno County zoning and building standards. No county materials were provided, so consult the Fresno County Planning Department to confirm that short‑term lodging is a permitted use for the subject parcel and unit type.
  1. Decide the operating model
  • Hosted vs. non‑hosted: Most jurisdictions allow both; some limit non‑hosted or cap the number of permits. No county ordinance was provided. Verify with Fresno County.
  1. Tax and registration obligations
  • Register and collect the county Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) where applicable; remit per the county’s tax calendar.
  • Many jurisdictions require a transient occupancy registration certificate prior to issuing an STR permit. Confirm with Fresno County Finance/Tax Collector and Planning.
  1. Insurance and risk management
  • Obtain short‑term rental or “short‑term lodging” coverage that includes premises liability, guest injury, and property damage. Standard landlord or homeowners policies often exclude STR exposure; an endorsement or separate policy is commonly needed.
  1. Guest safety and local law compliance
  • Install functioning smoke detectors on each level and in each sleeping room, carbon monoxide detectors where required, and at least one ABC fire extinguisher. Post emergency information and local house rules. Ensure egress routes are clear.
  1. Utilities, trash, parking, and noise
  • Confirm trash and recycling pickup is available. Establish quiet hours and parking limits consistent with neighborhood norms and any county rules.

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

  • Building and housing code compliance: Verify that the unit meets health, safety, and building standards; correct any violations prior to operation.
  • Fire safety equipment: Smoke and CO detectors as required; fire extinguisher(s).
  • Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT):
    • County registration/certificate, if required; monthly/quarterly returns and remittance.
  • Local STR permit/registration (if adopted by Fresno County):
    • Permit application to the Planning/Community Development Department.
    • Proof of principal residency for “hosted” STRs (as defined by local code).
    • Plot and floor plans; photographs; parking plan; compliance with local occupancy limits.
  • Advertising requirements:
    • Permit number inclusion in listings (common requirement in many jurisdictions).
  • Hosting platform obligations (where applicable):
    • Collection/remittance of TOT, reasonable care to confirm lawful permits, and recordkeeping (often for at least four years; see Santa Cruz ordinance as a model at documents.coastal.ca.gov/reports/2018/4/w20a/w20a-4-2018-exhibits.pdf).

Note: No Fresno County ordinance text was provided. Treat the above as a due‑diligence checklist; confirm specific requirements with the Fresno County Planning and Finance/Tax Collector offices.

Specific regulations for STRs: City, County, and State

  • City of Prather

    • None identified. Prather is an unincorporated community; there is no city-level STR ordinance in the provided materials.
  • Fresno County (unincorporated areas, including Prather)

    • No county-specific ordinance text or guidance was provided. If the County has adopted an STR or “vacation rental” ordinance, it would govern: whether STRs are allowed; caps or allocation methods; application procedures; permit revocation; platform obligations; local enforcement; and the TOT regime. Contact the County for the controlling ordinance.
  • California State Law (Applicable statewide unless preempted by a certified coastal program or local ordinance)

    • AB 3182 (2020) and related legislation:
      • Generally prohibits ordinances that ban STRs or define them as an illegal nuisance solely because of duration of tenancy if the STR meets certain health and safety criteria (e.g., smoke and CO detectors, 24‑hour contact, local registration, and TOT compliance).
      • Does not override valid local zoning or HOA restrictions; it sets a floor, not a ceiling, for local regulation.
    • Health and Safety:
      • smoke alarms (in sleeping rooms and on each level) and CO detectors in applicable dwellings.
    • Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT):
      • Counties administer TOT. Local registration, returns, and remittance are required where applicable.
    • Accessibility/Service Animals:
      • Service animals must be accommodated; no extra fees may be charged for service animals.
    • Employment and labor exposure:
      • Consider classification risks for on‑site cleaning and management staff; consult tax and labor counsel for payroll/tax treatment and wage/hour compliance.
    • Coastal zone considerations (for any property within the California Coastal Zone):
      • STR regulation should occur within a certified Local Coastal Program (LCP) or via coastal development permits. A sample framework appears in the Santa Cruz ordinance exhibits (see source link below). The California Coastal Commission’s December 6, 2016 guidance letter outlines recommended regulatory elements (e.g., caps, occupancy limits, parking, noise, local response/contact, signage, TOT, enforcement), and reiterates that STR regulation in the coastal zone should be implemented through LCP/CDP processes.

Contact information (local authority in charge of STRs)

  • Fresno County — Planning and Development Services
    • Website: www.co.fresno.ca.us/departments/planning-and-development-services
    • Phone: 559/600-4220
    • Address: 2220 Tulare Street, Suite A, Fresno, CA 93721
  • Fresno County — Tax Collector/Finance
    • Phone: 559/600-3536
    • Address: 2281 Fresno Street, Fresno, CA 93721
  • California Coastal Commission — Central Coast District Office (for coastal-zone properties)
    • Phone: 831/427-4863
    • Web: www.coastal.ca.gov

Note: When calling, ask for the Short‑Term Rental / Vacation Rental program contact and ask whether a separate STR permit is required, or whether Planning and Tax functions are consolidated under a single department.

Links to source pages (IMPORTANT)

  • Santa Cruz STR Ordinance (City exemplars and Commission exhibits):
    • documents.coastal.ca.gov/reports/2018/4/w20a/w20a-4-2018-exhibits.pdf
    • California Coastal Commission December 6, 2016 STR guidance letter (embedded within the PDF above)

These sources are provided to illustrate common ordinance structures, regulatory best practices, and the typical coastal-zone framework; they do not govern Prather unless a property is located within the California Coastal Zone and the local LCP includes STR provisions. Always confirm the applicable local ordinance with Fresno County.

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Prather

Market Saturation Score

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

Overview of Prather

Prather is an unincorporated community in Fresno County, California. It is located 25 miles (40 km) northeast of Fresno, at an elevation of 1,657 ft (505 m). Prather has a population of 1,569.The post office in Prather first opened in 1914, closed in 1935, re-opened in 1936, and moved in 1939. The name honors Joseph L. Prather who came to California in 1872 and whose ranch became the site of the town. It is the last community on California State Route 168 before the route climbs into the Sierras, passing Shaver Lake and Huntington Lake.

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