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Moultonborough, New Hampshire

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Moultonborough, NH

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STR Regulations for Moultonborough, New Hampshire

1) Overview: Are STRs allowed in Moultonborough?

Yes. There is no municipal prohibition on short‑term rentals. As of the latest town documents, Moultonborough does not have a separate “short‑term rental” licensing or permitting regime at the local level. Operationally, STRs in Moultonborough proceed under general land‑use, building, health/safety, and tax rules that apply to all residential properties. The town has discussed STR impacts in public meetings but has not adopted STR‑specific approvals, occupancy caps, or day‑limits.

Key implications:

  • You may operate an STR on a residential lot if your use and structure otherwise comply with zoning (single‑family detached, ADU limits, setbacks, septic, shoreland protections, etc.).
  • Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) are explicitly allowed as an accessory use to single‑family detached dwellings and must meet ADU standards (size, design, owner‑occupancy, septic). See Section 3 for ADU specifics that shape STR feasibility.
  • No local “STR permit” or day‑limit is documented in the provided sources. State taxes (Meals & Rooms) may apply (see Section 4).
  • The Planning Board and Land Use Office have flagged STRs as a policy concern (overdevelopment on waterfront lots, density, septic capacity, parking, noise), but no STR‑specific bylaw has been adopted to date.

If you plan to convert a nonconforming structure or site, or operate at a larger scale, consider how Article 7 (Nonconforming Structures) and shoreland/overlay district rules will apply. Also monitor Planning Board agendas (last reviewed Jan‑2025) for any future amendments targeting STRs.

References: Moultonborough Planning Board Minutes (Jan 15, 2025); Zoning Amendments Proposed for 2024 Town Meeting (Accessory Dwelling Units); Ordinances & Policies (Zoning Ordinance); NH STR overview (state‑level context).

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2) How to start a short‑term rental business in Moultonborough

Use this sequence to reduce risk and confirm compliance before listing your property.

  1. Confirm zoning and lot eligibility
  • Confirm the property is in a district where a single‑family dwelling is a permitted principal use.
  • Verify setbacks, height limits, shoreland protections (if applicable), wetland buffers (Article 9), and overlay district requirements (VCOD/WVOD).
  • Assess whether your unit is an ADU (must be attached to a single‑family detached dwelling). Detached ADUs and ADUs >1,100 sq ft were discussed by the Planning Board but not adopted; current rules limit ADUs to attached units up to 1,100 sq ft.
  1. Structures and nonconformities
  • If you are converting a structure (e.g., bunkhouse, garage with living area), ensure Article 7 (Nonconforming Structures/Lots) allows the change without increasing nonconformities, or that you obtain appropriate relief.
  • Consider whether your project requires a Certificate of Occupancy or Certificate of Inspection (the town has discussed codifying these rules but may be refining processes).
  1. Health and onsite systems
  • Verify that your septic system can support intended occupancy. RSA 485‑A:38 and the NH DES Subdivision/ISDS rules (Env‑Wq 1000) drive sizing and placement. The town often requires certification by a qualified NH professional.
  1. Building permits and inspections
  • As of the 2024 zoning amendments, ADUs require both a building permit and an occupancy permit. Other STR setups may also require building permits depending on the scope (renovation, conversion, new structures).
  • Meet state building and fire codes for construction and life safety.
  1. Taxes and registration
  • If you provide lodging for fewer than 30 consecutive days, NH’s Meals & Rooms Tax applies. Register with NH Department of Revenue Administration (DRA) if you haven’t already. Collect and remit the tax on qualifying rentals.
  • There is no documented local STR registration in the provided Moultonborough sources.
  1. Operations and neighbor relations
  • Establish occupancy, parking, and quiet hours appropriate for your lot constraints.
  • Provide guests with emergency info, evacuation plans, and local rules.
  • Keep records (permits, inspections, tax filings) to show due diligence during any land‑use inquiries.

References: Moultonborough Planning Board Minutes (Jan 15, 2025); Zoning Amendments Proposed for 2024 Town Meeting (ADUs, Dwelling Units Per Lot, VCOD/WVOD, Nonconforming Lots).

3) Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

Local requirements (Moultonborough)

  • Zoning and land use
    • Verify conformance with base zoning, shoreland protection, Article 9 wetland buffers, and overlay districts (VCOD/WVOD) before any work or listing.
    • If your property is nonconforming, confirm how Article 7 allows the intended use or conversion.
  • Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs)
    • Building permit and occupancy permit required.
    • Standards include:
      • Attached to an existing single‑family detached dwelling; up to 1,100 sq ft gross livable area.
      • Owner must reside in either the principal or accessory unit as primary residence.
      • No more than two bedrooms; maximum four occupants.
      • Provide at least one off‑street parking space in addition to those required for the primary residence (minimum total of three).
      • Aesthetic continuity and matching architecture with the primary dwelling.
      • Interior door between principal dwelling and ADU; main exterior entrances not on the same side of the building; no exterior stairway to the ADU on the front of the house.
      • Water supply and sewage disposal per NH RSA 485‑A:38; separate utility connections not required by the town.
      • ADU and lot cannot be converted to condominium ownership separate from the principal dwelling.
  • Additional dwellings
    • The town has proposed allowing the Land Use Office to approve additional dwellings when soil/slope suitability is documented, decongesting Planning Board agendas. Confirm the current status of this procedural change.
  • Certificates and inspections
    • Certificates of Occupancy/Inspection may be required for certain projects or uses; procedures may be refined in future amendments. Check with the Land Use Office.
  • State building/fire codes
    • All construction and life safety work must meet state building and fire code requirements for construction, living space, fire exits, and smoke alarms.

State/federal‑level items that commonly apply to STRs (verify applicability)

  • NH Meals & Rooms Tax (NH RSA 78‑A): Registration and tax remittance when renting lodging for fewer than 30 consecutive days.
  • NH RSA 485‑A:38 and DES ISDS design standards (Env‑Wq 1000): Septic and water supply standards (critical for occupancy limits).
  • Building and fire code requirements (state codes adopted locally).

References: Moultonborough Zoning Amendments 2024 (ADUs, Dwelling Units Per Lot, VCOD/WVOD, Nonconforming Lots); Moultonborough Planning Board Minutes (Jan 15, 2025); Ordinances & Policies; NH STR overview (for state‑level context).

4) Specific regulations that affect STRs: Moultonborough (town and county) and NH (state)

Town of Moultonborough – STR‑relevant rules and policy context

  • No town‑wide STR ordinance
    • No STR‑specific licensing, day limits, occupancy caps, or conditional use requirements for STRs are documented in the provided materials.
  • ADUs strongly regulate attached second units
    • ADUs are allowed only as an accessory to single‑family detached dwellings, with clear design, size, and owner‑occupancy requirements. These constraints limit the viability of “ADU‑as‑STR” strategies.
  • Dwelling density and additional units
    • The town moved toward administrative approval of additional dwellings where soils/slope capacity can be demonstrated. This could allow multiple units on a lot if criteria are met, but it does not create an STR exception.
  • Environmental constraints
    • Shoreland and wetland rules (Article 9) impose buffers and setbacks that directly affect building envelopes and density on waterfront lots. Wetland buffer clarifications and nonconforming lot clarifications were advanced in recent amendments.
  • Planning Board policy concerns
    • The Board has publicly discussed the cumulative effects of STRs on waterfront properties (density, septic load, parking, neighborhood character). As of January 2025, no STR‑targeting bylaw had been adopted.

Carroll County

  • No county‑level STR rules are present in the provided sources.

State of New Hampshire – STR‑relevant statutes and guidance

  • NH RSA 78‑A (Meals & Rooms Tax): If you rent accommodations for fewer than 30 consecutive days, you must register and collect/remit the tax.
  • NH RSA 485‑A and DES ISDS rules (Env‑Wq 1000): Govern septic design and sizing, affecting occupancy and use.
  • RSA 674:71–73 (ADU enabling): Provides statewide framework for accessory dwelling units. Moultonborough’s ADU provisions must align with state requirements.
  • NH RSA 356‑B:5 (condominium ownership): Moultonborough prohibits ADU condominiumization separate from the principal dwelling.
  • RSA 31‑39 (unincorporated areas): A generally applicable statute referenced in NH STR guides as a basis for municipal authority over occupancy and use. In practice, local ordinances control.

References: Moultonborough Planning Board Minutes (Jan 15, 2025); Moultonborough Zoning Amendments 2024 (ADUs, VCOD/WVOD, Nonconforming Lots); Moultonborough Ordinances & Policies; Proper Insurance NH STR overview.

5) Local authority contacts for STRs and land‑use questions

Moultonborough Town Hall (general contact)

  • Phone: (603) 476‑2347
  • Address: P.O. Box 139, 6 Holland Street, Moultonborough, NH 03254
  • Website: www.moultonboroughnh.gov

Town Planner (land use, zoning questions)

  • Planner: Dari Sassan
  • Phone: (603) 476‑2347
  • Email: dsassan@moultonboroughnh.gov

Planning Board (submissions, public hearings)

  • Address: P.O. Box 139, Moultonborough, NH 03254
  • Agendas & minutes are posted on the town website’s Agendas & Minutes portal.

Land Use Office (building permits, occupancy permits, ADUs)

  • No direct phone/email provided in the sources; general inquiries can be routed through Town Hall and the Town Planner.

For state tax registration (Meals & Rooms Tax)

  • NH Department of Revenue Administration (DRA): See the NH DRA website for Meals & Rooms Tax registration and filing. Contact details were not provided in the sources.

6) Links to source pages

  • Moultonborough Planning Board Minutes (January 15, 2025): moultonboroughnh.gov/AgendaCenter/ViewFile/Minutes/_01152025-806
  • Moultonborough Ordinances & Policies (including Zoning Ordinance link): www.moultonboroughnh.gov/232/Ordinances-Policies
  • Moultonborough Zoning Amendments Proposed for 2024 Town Meeting: moultonboroughnh.gov/DocumentCenter/View/2428
  • Proper Insurance: New Hampshire Airbnb Laws and STR Regulations (context, not Moultonborough‑specific): www.proper.insure/regulations/new-hampshire-airbnb-laws-and-short-term-rental-regulations/
  • Laconia Daily Sun: Meredith STR ordinance changes (regional context, not Moultonborough‑specific): www.laconiadailysun.com/news/elections/meredith-voters-approve-zoning-ordinance-changes-governing-short-term-rentals/article_1fd7cea8-ff5a-11ef-95a1-736c0f7fe2f3.html

Notes for investors

  • The town’s current posture permits STRs as part of the general residential framework; ADU rules are the primary local constraint on secondary units.
  • Given policy attention at the Planning Board, monitor future meetings for proposals that could introduce STR‑specific rules (e.g., waterfront caps, density limits, permitting, inspection, or occupancy limits). The town’s 2025 discussions explicitly flagged the absence of STR governance as an issue to consider in future reforms.

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Moultonborough

Market Saturation Score

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

Moultonborough is a town in Carroll County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 4,918 at the 2020 census, up from 4,044 at the 2010 census. Moultonborough is bounded in large part by Lake Winnipesaukee in the southwest and to a lesser extent by Squam Lake in the northwestern corner. The town includes the census-designated place of Suissevale and the community of Lees Mill.

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