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STR Regulations for Silver Springs, Nevada

Note on scope: Silver Springs is an unincorporated community in Lyon County, Nevada. The provided source content does not contain Silver Springs–specific or Lyon County–specific short‑term rental (STR) regulations. As a result, this guide anchors on Nevada state‑level requirements and STR frameworks, which serve as the baseline for any local ordinance that Lyon County could adopt under Assembly Bill 363 (AB363).

Overview: Are STRs Allowed in Silver Springs, NV?

Yes, AB363 allows short‑term rentals statewide subject to county and local approval. However, in unincorporated communities like Silver Springs, STR operations are lawful only if you obtain the requisite state, county, and—if applicable—local approvals and licenses. AB363 sets the baseline: distance requirements, licensing, fees, penalties, and accommodation‑facilitator compliance. Until Lyon County adopts a local ordinance, compliance with AB363 and any county requirements remains mandatory.

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Silver Springs?

Silver Springs hosts earn a median $17,879/year with $79 ADR and 92% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $20,411+ per year.

See the full Silver Springs market breakdown →

How to Start a Short‑Term Rental Business in this Market

If you are evaluating Silver Springs as an STR location, the following process reflects AB363’s compliance framework:

  1. Confirm eligibility:

    • Verify your property is zoned residential and eligible under AB363.
    • Check for any common‑interest community restrictions (CC&Rs or other governing documents). AB363 requires explicit authorization for STR/transient lodging if your property is in a homeowners association or similar community.
    • Confirm the property is not prohibited (e.g., mobile/manufactured homes, apartments, RVs/tents/motor vehicles). AB363 prohibits certain unit types and sets a 10% cap on multifamily buildings for STR usage.
    • Confirm distance from resort hotels (2,500 feet) and other licensed STRs (1,000 feet) as set by AB363.
  2. Property and unit constraints:

    • Maximum occupancy: 2 persons per bedroom or 10 persons per unit, whichever is less.
    • Bedrooms must match county records.
    • On‑site parking must be utilized first; only then may street parking be used, consistent with local rules.
  3. Licensing:

    • AB363 requires a county‑issued STR business license. You must include a valid license number in all advertising (including Airbnb/Vrbo/Expedia).
    • No distinction is made between owner‑occupied and non‑owner‑occupied STRs; all require a business license.
    • Each natural person or entity is limited to one licensed STR in residential areas (AB363 baseline).
  4. Compliance steps:

    • Apply for the county STR business license (see Required Documents).
    • Pass inspections as required by local agencies (e.g., fire/life safety).
    • Maintain a local representative able to respond within 30 minutes and available 24/7.
    • Post the county’s Good Neighbor brochure inside the STR.
  5. Advertising:

    • You may only advertise after the license is issued.
    • The accommodation facilitator (e.g., Airbnb/Vrbo) must be licensed with the county and must remit transient lodging taxes, if applicable.
  6. Fees and taxes:

    • Prepare to pay application, inspection, and initial licensing fees prior to operation.
    • Remit transient lodging tax (room tax) monthly if you collect payments directly; if an accommodation facilitator handles payments, they remit the tax on your behalf.

Note on timing: The Clark County ordinance and AB363 framework were in process as of the provided sources. If Lyon County has opened or closed licensing windows, check current county communications.

Required Documents, Permits, Licenses, and Guidelines

  • County STR business license:
    • Issued after application, inspection, and payment of fees.
    • Required to rent or advertise a property as an STR.
  • Good Neighbor brochure:
    • Must be displayed inside the STR; available from the county’s STR resources.
  • Inspection documentation:
    • Public safety agencies will schedule inspections; minimum safety measures are codified in ordinance Section 7.100.170 (as per county frameworks applying AB363).
  • Local representative information:
    • Name and 24/7 phone; must be reachable within 30 minutes to respond to complaints.
  • Governing documents (if applicable):
    • Proof that CC&Rs or other governing documents expressly allow STR/transient lodging use.
  • Transient lodging tax filings:
    • If you collect payments directly, remit room tax monthly with required reports.
    • If an accommodation facilitator collects, they remit the tax on your behalf.
  • Ownership verification:
    • Applicant must be the owner of record.
    • Ownership must be held by natural persons; for entities, all owners/officers/members/trustees must be natural persons 18+.

Note on required reporting: Monthly filings must include occupant nights and room rental revenue. Report criteria and definitions are published by the county (see Quick Links).

Specific Regulations for Short-Term Rentals (County/State Context)

Nevada state‑level baseline (AB363) governs Silver Springs in the absence of city‑specific rules:

  • License cap:
    • 1% cap on total eligible housing units per area, rounded down; minimum one license per established area if not excluded.
  • Distance separations:
    • 2,500 feet from resort hotels.
    • 1,000 feet from other licensed STRs.
  • Occupancy:
    • Two persons or fewer per bedroom, or a maximum of ten persons per unit, whichever is less.
  • Unit eligibility and exclusions:
    • Prohibited: RVs, travel trailers, tents, motor vehicles; mobile/manufactured homes; apartments; multifamily buildings where STR units exceed 10% of the building; affordable housing units; properties not connected to municipal wastewater (septic systems).
  • Fees (typical first‑year totals; check county schedules):
    • ≤3 bedrooms: $945 total ($45 application + $150 inspection + $750 annual license).
    • 3 bedrooms: $1,695 total ($45 application + $150 inspection + $1,500 annual license).

  • Transient lodging tax (room tax):
    • Remitted monthly when you collect payments directly; otherwise remitted by the accommodation facilitator.
  • Local representative:
    • Must respond within 30 minutes; available 24/7.
  • Advertising:
    • Only after license issuance; include the license number in all ads.
  • Complaint and enforcement:
    • Violations are subject to citation; penalties vary by violation type.
  • Appeals:
    • Denied applicants may request an administrative hearing.
  • Zoning and community rules:
    • Governing documents must expressly allow STR/transient lodging use where applicable.

Local Authority Contacts (Phone, Email, Website)

Nevada state and county resources; these offices handle or direct STR inquiries:

  • Nevada Legislature (AB363 resource)

    • Phone: 775‑684‑6832
    • Email: Available on Nevada Legislature website
    • Website: www.leg.state.nv.us/App/NELIS/REL/81st2021/Bill/7933/Overview
  • Clark County STR (operational reference for AB363 compliance)

    • Phone: 702‑455‑4252
    • Email: STR@ClarkCountyNV.gov
    • Website: www.clarkcountynv.gov/business/doing_business_with_clark_county/divisions/regulated_business/short_term_rentals/frequently-asked-questions

Notes:

  • Lyon County (where Silver Springs is located) has no provided contacts in the source content. For local county‑specific licensing and rules, contact the Lyon County Commission or the Lyon County Treasurer/Assessor.
  • If you use an accommodation facilitator, ensure the platform is licensed with the county to remit transient lodging taxes.

Links to Source Pages

  • Clark County Short‑Term Rentals (overview): www.clarkcountynv.gov/government/departments/administrative_services/intergovernmental_relations/short-term-rentals
  • Clark County STR Program (licensing, timelines, updates): www.clarkcountynv.gov/business/doing_business_with_clark_county/divisions/regulated_business/short_term_rentals/
  • Clark County STR FAQ and contact: www.clarkcountynv.gov/business/doing_business_with_clark_county/divisions/regulated_business/short_term_rentals/frequently-asked-questions
  • Nevada Legislature AB363 overview: www.leg.state.nv.us/App/NELIS/REL/81st2021/Bill/7933/Overview
  • STR Good Neighbor Brochure (Clark County PDF): www.clarkcountynv.gov/adobe/assets/urn:aaid:aem:57ba9e8c-6023-417e-9439-8f66026fbd52/original/as/short-term-rental-unit-good-neighbor-brochure.pdf
  • STR application period notification letter (Clark County PDF): main--clarkcountynv--aemsites.aem.page/assets/documents/business/doing_business_with_clark_county/divisions/regulated_business/short_term_rentals/notification-letter-for-short-term-rental-unit-licenses-in-unincorporated-clark-county.pdf
  • STR application timeline (Clark County PDF): www.clarkcountynv.gov/adobe/assets/urn:aaid:aem:42524af6-20c0-4c91-99c5-6be1584d5a2d/original/as/str-timeline-final-web-version-revised-002.pdf
  • STR required reporting definitions (Clark County PDF): www.clarkcountynv.gov/adobe/assets/urn:aaid:aem:1fa52e74-3295-4672-b9bc-b9da385d72eb/original/as/str-required-reporting-definitions.pdf
  • STR Frequently Asked Questions (Clark County PDF): main--clarkcountynv--aemsites.aem.page/assets/documents/government/departments/administrative_services/intergovernmental_relations/str-faqs.pdf
  • Short‑Term Rental Informational Map (Clark County GIS): ccgismo.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=8aef3548c506431d8ad2820c99b5c0f5
  • Clark County OpenWeb (jurisdiction verification): maps.clarkcountynv.gov/ow/
  • Judge temporarily blocks Clark County STR rules (2025 news context): www.shelterrealty.com/2025/09/03/judge-temporarily-blocks-clark-county-short-term-rental-rules-amid-glvstra-airbnb-lawsuit/
  • Nevada Independent analysis of AB363 (local context and criticism): thenevadaindependent.com/article/nevada-passed-a-short-term-rental-law-four-years-ago-was-it-a-ban-in-disguise

Investor‑grade next step: Confirm current Lyon County STR requirements and whether a licensing window is open. Until then, align your plans with AB363’s baseline and maintain readiness to obtain county licensing, inspections, and transient lodging tax compliance.

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Silver Springs

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 Silver Springs

Overview of Silver Springs

Silver Springs is a census-designated place (CDP) in Lyon County, Nevada, United States at the intersection of US 50 (California Trail) and US 95A. The population was 5,296 at the 2010 census. Lahontan Reservoir, Lahontan State Recreation Area and historic Fort Churchill State Historic Park are all located nearby. The area is served by the Silver Springs Airport.

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