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Hialeah, FL

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STR Regulations for Hialeah, Florida

Short-term rentals are allowed in Hialeah, Florida, but they are regulated at the state and Miami‑Dade County level. As of 2025, there is no Hialeah‑specific short‑term rental ordinance in the provided materials, and the City directs property owners to the State and County for licensing and standards. Practically, operating a compliant STR in Hialeah means meeting Florida’s vacation rental licensing and tax rules, and Miami‑Dade County’s vacation rental regulations and Certificate of Use (CU) program.

Below is a practical, step‑by‑step guide for investors.

How to start a short-term rental business in Hialeah

  1. Confirm zoning and property eligibility
  • Ensure the property is permitted for residential short‑term rentals and that HOA/condo rules allow STRs.
  • For properties within a municipality like Hialeah, Florida Statutes §509.032(7)(b) requires compliance with any local short‑term rental regulations; the county ordinance clarifies those requirements for unincorporated areas and is the current operational framework in Hialeah in the absence of a city‑specific ordinance.
  1. Obtain the required Florida vacation rental license
  • Register with the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) as a transient public lodging establishment if you are renting the whole property to transients for fewer than 30 days, more than three times a year. DBPR’s Vacation Rental Checklist (C1030) details the application steps.
  1. Register for state and county tourist taxes
  • Florida sales tax applies. If your property is in Hialeah (Miami‑Dade County), you must also register for and collect Miami‑Dade’s Convention and Tourist Development taxes (also called “transient rentals tax” or “bed tax”). This is done through the Tourist Tax Account process.
  1. Apply for Miami‑Dade County Certificate of Use (CU)
  • You must obtain a County CU before listing and advertising a property as a vacation rental. The County will schedule an inspection as part of CU issuance.
  1. Prepare for safety, occupancy, and compliance
  • Meet occupancy limits and safety requirements (including pool safety, posted rules, and guest checks). Adopt operating procedures: nightly rate setting and minimum stays, guest screening, booking recordkeeping, noise/parking enforcement, and rapid violation response 24/7.
  1. Market and list
  • Only advertise after the CU is approved. Post required information inside the property (responsible party contact, maximum occupancy). Comply with zoning sign limitations.

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Hialeah?

Hialeah hosts earn a median $27,476/year with $123 ADR and 72% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $45,492+ per year.

See the full Hialeah market breakdown

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

Florida licensing and registration

  • DBPR Vacation Rental License (C1030 checklist)
    • Purpose: Authorizes operating a transient public lodging establishment in Florida.
    • Key items typically include proof of property control, proof of fire safety compliance for the unit, and payment of fees.

Miami‑Dade County vacation rental Certificate of Use (CU)

  • CU application (online portal; submit prior to advertising)
  • Inspection component (scheduled by the County)
  • Fee: CU fee $36.70; inspection $89.97 plus $9.50 surcharge = total $136.17. CU renewal is annual and at the same cost.
  • Approval conditions:
    • Property must pass inspection.
    • No outstanding fines or liens related to the vacation rental code may exist.
  • Display requirement: When the property is in use as a vacation rental, the CU must be displayed inside the unit in a conspicuous location, clearly visible to guests. It must show the responsible party’s name, address, phone number, and maximum occupancy.

County‑required documentation and records

  • Proof of ownership and identification
  • Property floor plan and occupancy calculation
  • Fire safety plan compliance for the unit
  • Proof of insurance (recommended; verify if required by local rules)
  • Guest register: Maintain a register of all guest names and dates of stay, open for County inspection
  • 24/7 response commitment for violations

Safety and compliance obligations

  • Swimming pools:

    • If the STR has a pool, you must have at least one of the safety features listed in Florida Statutes §515.27 (pool safety barrier, safety cover, alarm, or door latch/alarm) in place before any person under age six uses the property.
    • You must also comply with Miami‑Dade County pool fence requirements and other residential codes for solid waste, noise, public nuisance, parking, advertising, and pets.
  • Occupancy limits:

    • Maximum overnight occupancy: Up to 2 persons per bedroom, plus 2 additional persons per property, capped at 12 persons. Children under 3 are excluded from the count.
  • Sexual offender and predator screening:

    • Responsible party must obtain confirmation from a law enforcement agency that a prospective guest is not a registered sexual offender or sexual predator.
    • If the STR is within 2,500 feet of a school, it is a violation to allow a registered sexual offender or predator to occupy the property for 4 or more days in any month.

Posting and notice requirements

  • Responsible party information and maximum occupancy posted inside the rental
  • Written guest notice of local standards and regulations (noise, public nuisance, parking, solid waste, common area usage), provided before occupancy and posted inside the unit
  • Notice to guests of any property limitations on disabled access when listing the property
  • Notice to the homeowners’ or condominium association (if any) that the property will be used as a vacation rental, and compliance with all association STR policies

Specific regulations (city, county, state)

State of Florida

  • Licensing: DBPR regulates “transient public lodging establishments” under Florida Statutes §509.013(4) and §509.032. Licensing is required to rent to transients for fewer than 30 days more than three times per year.
  • Taxes: Florida sales tax applies; Miami‑Dade Convention and Tourist Development (bed) tax applies to transient rentals in the county.
  • Pool safety: Required pool safety feature per Florida Statutes §515.27 for properties rented to guests under age six.

Miami‑Dade County (operational framework for Hialeah)

  • Ordinance authority: County Code Chapter 33, Article I, Section 33‑28 (Vacation Rentals).
  • Key CU and licensing prerequisites: DBPR license, Tourist Tax Account registration, and County CU.
  • Responsible party residency restriction (limited):
    • In properties designated as Estate or Low Density Residential on the County’s CDMP Land Use Plan Map, the responsible party must reside for more than six months per year in the property being offered as a vacation rental. There are no residency restrictions in other land use categories.
  • Posting, notice, guest registry, and 24/7 violation response obligations.
  • Enforcement and penalties (civil fines per Chapter 8CC):
    • Operating without a CU:
      • First offense: $100
      • Second offense within 24 months: $1,000
      • Third offense within 24 months and subsequent offenses: $2,500
    • Liens may be placed on the property if fines and costs are not paid or violations corrected.

City of Hialeah (municipal)

  • The provided content does not include a Hialeah‑specific STR ordinance. In the absence of a city‑published STR regime, property owners must comply with Florida and Miami‑Dade County requirements. Because municipalities retain the right to regulate STRs (Florida Statutes §509.032(7)(b)), investors should confirm directly with Hialeah whether any local licensing, zoning, or registration applies.

Taxes and business registration

  • Florida sales tax: Collected on transient rentals and remitted to the Department of Revenue.
  • Miami‑Dade Convention and Tourist Development tax: Required for transient rentals; register for the Tourist Tax Account and collect and remit monthly.
  • Operational tip: Major booking platforms (e.g., Airbnb/VRBO) often collect and remit certain taxes on behalf of hosts. You remain responsible for compliance and should verify what is collected automatically versus what you must remit directly.

Enforcement and penalties

  • Miami‑Dade enforces violations of the County’s vacation rental ordinance and related codes:
    • CU requirements, posting, notice, guest registry, occupancy, noise, parking, solid waste, advertising, and pool safety.
    • Penalties for operating without a CU are detailed above; other violations fall under the general civil penalties schedule in Chapter 8CC.
  • In addition to fines, failure to resolve violations can lead to liens and potential loss of the CU.

Step-by-step licensing and compliance workflow in Hialeah

  1. Pre‑application
  • Check zoning/HOA rules and confirm eligibility for STR use.
  • Review Florida Statutes and County Code obligations.
  1. State license and tax setup
  • Apply for DBPR vacation rental license (C1030).
  • Set up Florida sales tax and Miami‑Dade Tourist Tax Account for tax collection.
  1. CU application and inspection
  • Submit the County CU application before listing or advertising.
  • Prepare the property for inspection (life‑safety, occupancy, postings).
  • Post the CU inside the unit upon issuance.
  1. Operating policies
  • Implement guest screening (including sexual offender checks where applicable).
  • Maintain guest registry and publish required notices.
  • Adopt written rules (quiet hours, parking, trash), and provide 24/7 violation response.
  1. Renewal and recordkeeping
  • Renew the County CU annually.
  • Keep records (guest registry, tax filings, communications) available for inspection.

Key contacts and resources

City of Hialeah (general municipal contact)

  • Phone: 305‑887‑9001
  • Website: www.hialeahfl.gov/
  • Address: Hialeah City Hall, 501 Palm Avenue, Hialeah, FL 33010

Miami‑Dade County (vacation rentals and CU)

  • Neighborhood Regulations Division (report violations; STR compliance questions): 786‑315‑2552
  • 311 Contact Center (general information and complaints): 311
  • Regulatory and Economic Resources (RER)
    • Stephen P. Clark Center: 111 NW 1st Street, 11th Floor, Miami, FL 33128 — 305‑375‑2877
    • Herbert S. Saffir Permitting and Inspection Center: 11805 SW 26 Street, Miami, FL 33175 — 786‑315‑2000
    • Department email: Use 311 contact for routing; consult County site for current forms/contacts

Florida State (licensing and taxes)

  • DBPR Vacation Rental Licensing (C1030) — see references for link
  • Florida Department of Revenue — see references for link

References and source links

  • Miami‑Dade County – Residential Short‑Term Vacation Rentals (standards, CU, inspections, enforcement): www.miamidade.gov/building/standards/residential-short-term-vacation-rentals.asp
  • Miami‑Dade County Code of Ordinances – Section 33‑28 (Vacation Rentals): library.municode.com/fl/miami_-dade_county/codes/code_of_ordinances?nodeId=PTIIICOOR_CH33ZO_ARTIINGE_S33-28VARE
  • Miami‑Dade County Ordinance (vacation rentals, background): www.miamidade.gov/govaction/matter.asp?matter=172425&file=false&fileAnalysis=false&yearFolder=Y2017
  • Miami‑Dade CDMP Land Use Plan Map (for responsible‑party residency restriction): gisweb.miamidade.gov/landmanagement/
  • Florida Statutes §515.27 (Pool safety feature requirement): www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_Mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=&URL=Ch0515/Sec27.htm&StatuteYear=2001
  • DBPR Vacation Rental Licensing Checklist (C1030): www.myfloridalicense.com/CheckListDetail.asp?SID=&xactCode=1030&clientCode=2006&XACT_DEFN_ID=7717
  • Florida Department of Revenue (taxes): floridarevenue.com/taxes/Pages/default.aspx
  • Hialeah Rent Increase Notice Ordinance (municipal context): www.hialeahfl.gov/DocumentCenter/View/14680/Ordinance-2022-018-PDF

Investor takeaway

  • Hialeah STRs are allowed but must meet state and county standards. Obtain the DBPR license, register for taxes, and secure the Miami‑Dade County CU before listing. Operate within occupancy and safety limits, maintain required notices and guest records, and be prepared for inspections and enforcement. Always verify with Hialeah whether any additional municipal rules or registrations apply, as municipalities in Florida may adopt their own STR regulations.

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Hialeah

Market Saturation Score

036912
Mild Saturation
2/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
2–4 declining months: early saturation pressure - watch for trend persistence.
View Full Hialeah Market Analysis

Photos of Hialeah

Overview of Hialeah

Hialeah is a sizable city in Miami-Dade County, Florida, situated just northwest of downtown Miami. With a population of roughly 220,000 residents, it is one of the largest municipalities in Florida and one of the largest Hispanic-majority cities in the United States, with a deep Cuban-American cultural identity that shapes its restaurants, bakeries, botanicas, and street life. The city has a working-class, family-oriented feel, with a dense urban grid, leafy residential streets, and a steady hum of small commerce. Because it sits at the western edge of the Miami urban corridor, Hialeah serves as a convenient and affordable base for visitors who want to explore greater Miami while staying just outside the bustle of the coast. It is approximately 10 miles northwest of downtown Miami and roughly 15 miles from Miami Beach.

A landmark at the very heart of the city is Hialeah Park, a former horse racing track built in 1925 in a flamboyant Mediterranean style. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the property once hosted some of the most storied thoroughbred races in American history and today operates as a casino and entertainment venue with gardens, flamingos, and a preserved grandstand. It is essentially a short drive from anywhere in the city. Just minutes north, Amelia Earhart Park offers a welcome green escape within the urban grid. The 515-acre county park features a working farm, bike trails, lakes for fishing and paddleboats, and a popular off-leash dog area, making it a strong option for families and outdoor-oriented guests.

About 15 to 20 miles to the east lies Miami Beach, the Atlantic coastline that draws millions of visitors each year with its art deco architecture, sandy beaches, and nightlife. Drive times from Hialeah to South Beach typically run 30 to 45 minutes depending on traffic. To the west, Everglades National Park is reachable in roughly 45 minutes to an hour, offering airboat rides, wildlife viewing, and the singular landscape of the River of Grass.

For short-term rental investors, Hialeah is compelling because it combines a central Miami-Dade location with noticeably lower operating costs than the beach communities. Guests get a culturally rich, authentic South Florida experience along with quick access to Miami's beaches, downtown, the airport, and the Everglades, all from a base that feels distinctly local rather than touristy.

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