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North Richland Hills, Texas

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North Richland Hills, TX

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STR Regulations for North Richland Hills, Texas

Note: This guide consolidates city information and public media reports about North Richland Hills’ short‑term rental (STR) regulations as of mid‑October 2025. Details are current as of the city’s Oct. 13, 2025 City Council action and the public guidance that followed. City implementation details (permit portal, fee schedules, forms) will evolve; verify the latest requirements and timelines with city staff before applying.

Overview and Key Policy Position

  • Are STRs allowed in NRH? Yes, but with significant restrictions.
    • Existing STRs may continue to operate if they obtain an annual permit and inspection and comply with all rules (occupancy, noise, parking, safety, and hotel tax obligations).
    • No new STRs are permitted in traditional single‑family neighborhoods.
    • New STRs are permitted only in multi‑family, commercial, and Transit Oriented Development (TOD) zoning districts.
    • In multi‑family buildings, STRs are limited to no more than 5% of the total units in the complex.
    • A minimum stay of two nights applies to rentals.
    • The new ordinances became effective Nov. 13, 2025; compliance registration for existing STRs is due by the end of January (deadline specified in city communications and media coverage).

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How to Start a Short-Term Rental Business in North Richland Hills

  1. Verify zoning eligibility
  • If your property is in a traditional single‑family neighborhood, you cannot start a new STR in NRH.
  • If your property is in multi‑family, commercial, or a Transit Oriented Development (TOD) district, new STRs are allowed. For multi‑family properties, ensure STR units do not exceed 5% of the total units.
  1. If you are an existing operator in a compliant area
  • Apply for the city’s annual STR permit and inspection promptly. The city indicated existing STRs have until the end of January to register with the city once the registration portal is live. Staff will notify operators when the portal opens.
  1. Prepare the property and documentation
  • Ensure compliance with safety standards (fire safety, smoke and CO detectors), occupancy limits, parking, and maintenance.
  • Designate a local contact who can respond to issues within 60 minutes.
  • Establish and maintain guest notification materials (emergency contacts, quiet hours, garbage collection schedules, and other safety information).
  • Set up systems to collect and remit hotel occupancy taxes and maintain booking records as required.
  1. Permit, inspection, and renewals
  • Submit an annual permit application with the required fee; the permit is non‑transferable.
  • Complete initial inspection(s) before occupancy; quarterly and complaint‑based inspections may occur after approval.
  • Renew annually and maintain continuous compliance to avoid enforcement.
  1. Ongoing compliance
  • Adhere to occupancy limits, noise, parking, and property maintenance requirements.
  • Address violations promptly; repeat violations can trigger fines and permit revocation.
  • Consider neighboring use impacts to minimize complaints (noise, parking, guest behavior, trash).

Required Documents, Permits, Licenses, and Operational Guidelines

  • Annual STR permit (non‑transferable) and fee
    • Initial permit must be obtained and renewed annually.
    • City staff will notify operators when the registration portal is active.
  • Inspections
    • Initial inspection required before occupancy; quarterly inspections and inspections based on complaints may be performed thereafter.
  • Safety and occupancy standards
    • Comply with occupancy limits, fire safety, and general safety standards.
    • Maintain smoke and carbon monoxide detectors and other required safety equipment.
  • Guest notification and information display
    • Units must display emergency contacts, quiet hours, garbage collection schedules, and other safety information.
  • Local response capability
    • A designated local contact must be able to respond within 60 minutes.
  • Records and taxes
    • Maintain booking records as required.
    • Pay hotel occupancy taxes and any back taxes or enter into an approved payment arrangement if applicable.
  • Enforcement triggers
    • Permit revocation thresholds include multiple violations within defined periods (as outlined in city/media materials).
  • Minimum stay
    • Rentals must be for at least two nights.

Note on fees and forms: Exact application forms, inspection checklists, and fee schedules will be published as the city activates the online portal. Operators should check city announcements and contact staff for the latest documents.

Specific Regulations and Restrictions

  • Zoning and use
    • No new STRs in traditional single‑family neighborhoods.
    • New STRs allowed in multi‑family, commercial, and TOD zoning districts.
    • Multi‑family STR cap: no more than 5% of the total units in the complex.
  • Operational requirements
    • Annual permit, inspections, local contact response, guest notification, and compliance with safety, occupancy, noise, and parking rules.
  • Minimum stay
    • Two nights minimum per rental.
  • Taxes
    • Hotel occupancy taxes must be collected and remitted; existing operators may need to address back taxes or payment arrangements.
  • Enforcement
    • Fines for operating without a permit: up to $500.
    • Fines for other STR violations: up to $2,000.
    • Permit revocation for repeat violations (thresholds included in ordinance language and public materials).
  • Timeline
    • Effective date: Nov. 13, 2025.
    • Registration deadline for existing STRs: end of January (after portal activation and staff notification).

Zoning map for permitted STR areas

Use the city’s STR Zoning Map to confirm whether a property is in an allowed district: see “STR Zoning Map” link under “Key City Source” below.

State and County Context (Texas)

  • Hotel Occupancy Tax (HOT)
    • Texas imposes a 6% state HOT on short‑term rentals. Many Texas cities, including NRH, also levy local HOT. STR operators must register, collect, and remit state and any applicable local hotel taxes.
    • For state HOT and local tax guidance, consult the Texas Comptroller and the city’s tax administration once the portal and fee schedules are published.
  • Local authority
    • City of North Richland Hills is the primary regulator of STR land use and operations in the city. Tarrant County’s direct STR regulations do not appear in the cited materials; county contacts are not provided as part of the cited sources.

Contact Information

  • City Hall (general)
    • 4301 City Point Drive, North Richland Hills, TX 76180
    • Phone: 817‑427‑6000
  • Short‑term rental input and city updates
    • Email (city‑provided contact for STR input): [email protected]
    • Text updates: Text “Rentals” to 888777
  • Civic Alerts and city announcements
    • CivicAlerts page for STR updates and portal activation notices (see link below)

Key City Source (Primary)

  • CivicAlerts page (STR announcements, public hearings, ordinances, portal updates, and maps): www.nrhtx.com/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=1244
    • Links on that page include:
      • Oct. 13, 2025 City Council meeting materials and video
      • Oct. 2, 2025 Planning & Zoning meeting materials and video
      • Sept. 8, 2025 City Council meeting materials and video
      • STR Zoning Map (DocumentCenter/View/20647)
      • Draft STR Ordinance (proposal stage, DocumentCenter/View/17686)
      • Proposed Ordinance – Chapter 18 (DocumentCenter/View/…)
      • Proposed Ordinance – Zoning (DocumentCenter/View/…)
  • Facebook post summarizing the approved regulations (city‑published): www.facebook.com/NRHCityHall/posts/new-regulations-for-short-term-rental-properties-have-been-approved-by-the-north/1231178035723256/

Additional Reporting Sources (useful for context)

  • WFAA coverage of ordinance details and enforcement thresholds: www.wfaa.com/article/news/local/north-richland-hills-short-term-rental-city-council-rules-fines/287-9cfb17a5-5f71-41c9-a921-1a3d00c553f0
  • KERA News analysis and public hearing summary: www.keranews.org/news/2025-10-21/north-richland-hills-approves-regulations-on-short-term-rentals-what-does-that-mean-for-residents

Practical Next Steps for Investors

  • Confirm zoning using the STR Zoning Map; if in single‑family, do not plan new STR operations in NRH.
  • For eligible properties (multi‑family, commercial, TOD), plan for the 5% cap in multi‑family and any complex‑specific rules.
  • Monitor the CivicAlerts page and staff notifications for portal activation and application timelines.
  • Prepare property for inspection and guest notification; designate and train a responsive local contact.
  • Establish tax compliance systems for state and local hotel occupancy taxes.
  • Budget for permit fees and inspections; build a compliance file to handle periodic inspections and any complaint responses.
  • Avoid violations to protect your permit; track guest conduct and maintain strong neighbor relations.

This guide will be updated as NRH publishes final application portals, forms, and fee schedules. Contact city staff at the numbers/emails above for current requirements before you invest or launch operations.

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North Richland Hills

Market Saturation Score

036912
Moderate Saturation
6/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
5–7 declining months: moderate saturation risk - market may be nearing capacity.
View Full North Richland Hills Market Analysis →

Photos of North Richland Hills

Overview of North Richland Hills

North Richland Hills, commonly known as NRH, is a city in the U.S. state of Texas, located in Tarrant County. It is a mid-to-high end suburb of Fort Worth and forms part of the Mid-Cities region of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. The population was 69,917 at the 2020 census, making it the third largest city in Tarrant County. In 2006, North Richland Hills was selected as one of the “Top 100 Best Places to live in America” according to Money magazine, and in 2016, the Dallas Morning News ranked North Richland Hills #9 on its list of best Dallas–Fort Worth neighborhoods. Major streets and highways include: FM 1938 (Davis Boulevard), Mid Cities Boulevard, Bedford-Euless Road, Interstate Highway 820, North Tarrant Parkway, FM 3029 (Precinct Line Road), and TX SH 26. It is home to the Birdville Independent School District, and the northern portion is served by Keller ISD. NRH notably houses the headquarters of HealthMarkets. North Richland Hills features popular businesses and locations, including the NRH20 Water Park, Medical City North Hills, and its own state-of-the-art public library. Additionally, NRH is surrounded by numerous communities, such as Haltom City, Keller, Hurst, and Southlake. It also housed the now-demolished North Hills Mall, which ceased operations in 2004. As of 2016, that site is now the new location of the North Richland Hills City Hall. In 2012, North Richland Hills was ranked at #44 as one of the Best Dallas Suburbs according to D Magazine.

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