logo image

Tahuya, Washington

Regulations >
Washington >
Tahuya

Want to see how Tahuya compares to other top cities in Washington?  Explore all city regulations in Washington. →

A

Tahuya, WA

Very Investor Friendly

Local STR Agent

Local STR Agent

Tahuya STR Expert
Tahuya, Washington skyline

STR Regulations for Tahuya, Washington

Overview: Are Short-Term Rentals Allowed in Tahuya, WA?

Explicit answer: Yes—short-term rentals are allowed in Tahuya, Washington. Tahuya is an unincorporated community within Mason County; there are no city-specific local ordinances regulating short-term rentals. As a result, STR operators must comply with Mason County provisions (if any) and Washington State regulations. This guide distills the regulatory framework, startup process, required documents and licenses, and contact points you need to launch and operate a compliant STR in Tahuya.

Key implications for investors:

  • There is no city-level permitting in Tahuya. Focus on state and county.
  • The regulatory environment is relatively light at the local level (low STR regulation level confirmed by third-party market analyses), but you must meet state business, tax, and safety requirements.
  • County and state rules can change. Always confirm requirements with the relevant agencies before listing.

References supporting this overview:

  • Checkmate Rentals confirms no specific local Airbnb/STR laws in Tahuya and points to Mason County and Washington State rules.
  • AirROI labels the Tahuya market’s STR regulation level as “Low.”

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Tahuya?

Tahuya hosts earn a median $30,451/year with $280 ADR and 46% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $47,154+ per year.

See the full Tahuya market breakdown →

How to Start a Short-Term Rental Business in Tahuya

Tahuya’s rural character and nature-focused appeal (Hood Canal, Tahuya State Forest) make it attractive for cabin, house, and unique-stay listings. To launch:

  1. Verify zoning and property readiness
  • Confirm your parcel allows transient lodging. In unincorporated Mason County, residential use generally permits STRs, but covenants or HOA rules (if any) may restrict rentals. Review any neighborhood covenants before purchase.
  • Ensure the dwelling meets basic habitability and life-safety standards. Install/maintain smoke detectors, carbon monoxide detectors (if applicable), and a fire extinguisher. Provide an emergency information notice to guests.
  1. Register the business with Washington State
  • Obtain a Unified Business Identifier (UBI) number through the Washington State Department of Revenue (DOR). This is your business license number and is required to collect and remit state taxes on lodging.
  • If you expect gross annual income at or above $12,000, register for Washington’s B&O (Business & Occupation) tax.
  1. Set up tax collection and lodging compliance
  • Sales tax: Washington applies a combined state and local sales tax to short-term rentals (approximately 7% to 9.6% depending on location). Confirm the exact combined rate for your property’s tax jurisdiction with DOR.
  • Lodging tax: Washington State’s lodging tax applies to temporary lodging, including STRs. You must collect and remit this tax in addition to sales tax.
  • Special hotel/motel taxes: Depending on local rates (city/county), an additional percentage (commonly 1–5% of the listing price including cleaning fees) may apply.
  • Remit taxes through the DOR MyDOR portal. Maintain accurate guest-night records and monthly filings.
  1. Organize operations
  • Choose a legal structure (e.g., sole proprietor, LLC) and open a dedicated business bank account.
  • Purchase appropriate insurance for short-term rental liability and property damage.
  • Establish housekeeping, maintenance, and guest communication protocols. Consider dynamic pricing aligned with Tahuya’s seasonality (peak: July–August; low: January–February).
  1. Launch on platforms and comply with notices
  • Create listings on Airbnb, VRBO, Vacasa, and other channels. Display your UBI number where required by platforms.
  • Provide guests with local rules and notices (e.g., fireworks prohibition, quiet hours if applicable, garbage/recycling instructions).
  • Display safety information in each room/unit (location of fire extinguishers, gas shutoff, exits, alarms).
  1. Ongoing compliance
  • Monitor changing state and county rules.
  • File and remit sales, lodging, and B&O taxes on schedule.
  • Keep guest-night logs and receipts for at least the statutory period.

Supporting guidance for tax, licensing, and business registration:

  • Washington State Department of Revenue: business licensing (UBI) and lodging/STR taxation.
  • Hosts must register as a business and collect/remit lodging and sales taxes. B&O tax may apply depending on income.

Required Documents, Permits, Licenses, and Guidelines

What you must have before hosting:

  • Unified Business Identifier (UBI) number from Washington DOR.
  • Washington State business registration (B&O tax registration if income ≥ $12,000).
  • Tax setup for sales tax and state lodging tax remittance via DOR MyDOR.
  • Property insurance for short-term rental operations.
  • Life-safety basics: smoke detectors, carbon monoxide detectors (if applicable), fire extinguisher(s).
  • Guest-facing emergency/safety notice posted in each room/unit.
  • HOA/covenant review (if applicable).

What you generally do not need in Tahuya:

  • City business license (Tahuya is unincorporated; no city-level licensing).
  • City STR permit (Tacoma rules are a different city; included here only for context and are not applicable in Tahuya).

City example for context only (not applicable in Tahuya):

  • Tacoma requires a city business license and a Transient Accommodation License if renting three or more individual rooms, plus RRIO inspections. This is not a requirement in Tahuya unless your property lies within city limits. If you are evaluating Tacoma properties separately, review Tacoma’s tip sheet and licensing pages.

Specific Regulations for Short-Term Rentals: City, County, and State

Washington State (applies statewide)

  • Registration and licensing:
    • Obtain a UBI number via Washington DOR.
    • Local business license may be required if operating inside incorporated city limits (not applicable in unincorporated Tahuya).
  • Zoning and land use:
    • Statewide, STRs must comply with local zoning. Some cities impose restrictions such as residency requirements, unit caps, or bans in certain districts. Tahuya has no known local restrictions as an unincorporated community, but you must still meet county and state rules.
  • Health and safety:
    • Properties must have smoke detectors and CO detectors where applicable, and fire extinguishers. Provide emergency/safety information to guests.
  • Taxes:
    • Combined sales tax (state + local) applies to STR rentals.
    • State lodging tax applies to temporary lodging.
    • Special hotel/motel tax may apply (set by local jurisdictions).
    • B&O tax may apply based on gross income.

Mason County (county-level, applies to Tahuya as unincorporated)

  • There are no Mason County-specific STR ordinances provided in the source materials. However, county-level provisions may exist for on-site sewage, health, and land use that impact STRs. Confirm with Mason County before listing.
  • If you plan any significant structural changes or expansions, check county building and land use requirements.

City of Tahuya (none; unincorporated)

  • There are no city-specific STR rules in Tahuya.

City of Tacoma (context only; not applicable to Tahuya)

  • Tacoma requires a city business license; if renting 3+ individual rooms, a Transient Accommodation License is required; owner-residency rules apply for room rentals; RRIO inspections are required; and short-term rentals are prohibited in certain spaces (e.g., RVs, tents, garages). These rules are not applicable in Tahuya unless your property is inside Tacoma city limits.

Source links for detailed municipal context (not for Tahuya):

  • Tacoma Permits STR tip sheet and Tacoma Finance STR page.

Contact Information for Local Authorities

Use these contacts to confirm your setup, file taxes, and check for county provisions.

Washington State Department of Revenue (DOR)

  • Phone (general): 360-902-7125
  • Lodging/Short-Term Rental tax line: 360-705-6702
  • UBI/Business Licensing (MyDOR): Access via DOR’s online portal
  • Website for lodging/STR tax guidance: dor.wa.gov/education/industry-guides/lodging-guide/lodging-transient-short-term
  • Apply for business license and UBI: dor.wa.gov/open-business/apply-business-license

Mason County (confirm local provisions as needed)

  • General phone: 360-427-9670
  • County website: masoncountywa.gov (general)
  • Planning/Building: 360-427-9670 (for zoning and land use questions) Note: The sources did not provide a dedicated STR contact for Mason County. Use the general line to identify the correct department.

City of Tacoma (context only; not applicable in Tahuya)

  • Planning & Development Services: 253-591-5030; zoning@cityoftacoma.org
  • Tacoma Permits site (permits and tip sheets): tacomapermits.org
  • Tacoma Finance STR guidance (not for Tahuya): tacoma.gov/government/departments/finance/taxes-and-licenses/business-licensing/specific-business-activity/short-term-rentals

Links to Source Pages (Important)

State rules and licensing

  • Washington Department of Revenue: Apply for business license (UBI)
  • Washington Department of Revenue: Lodging/Transient Short-Term Rental guidance
  • Washington Department of Revenue: Business Licensing & UBI FAQs

County context

  • Mason County official website (general information)

City example (context only; not applicable to Tahuya)

  • City of Tacoma Permits: Short-Term Rentals Tip Sheet
  • City of Tacoma Finance: Short-term Rentals licensing

Market/regulation context

  • Checkmate Rentals: Tahuya overview (no specific local laws; Mason County and Washington State apply)
  • AirROI: Tahuya Airbnb Market Analysis (regulation level “Low”)

Operational listing sites

  • Vacasa: Tahuya listings (operational overview, not regulatory guidance)

Notes for investors

  • The “low regulation level” designation for Tahuya reflects the absence of city-specific rules; it does not exempt you from state/county obligations.
  • If you discover an applicable Mason County ordinance not captured here, incorporate it into your business plan and licensing workflow before listing.

Next step

Found a property in Tahuya?

Paste any address and get estimated revenue, cash-on-cash return, and comparable STR performance in under 5 minutes. 3 free analyses per day.

Ask the AI Advisor about Tahuya →

Free brief

Get the free Tahuya STR Investment Brief

Revenue data, top neighborhoods, seasonal trends, and the key regulations for Tahuya, Washington in one email.

Tahuya

Market Saturation Score

036912
High Saturation
10/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
8–10 declining months: high saturation - supply likely outpacing demand.
View Full Tahuya Market Analysis →

Photos of Tahuya

Overview of Tahuya

Tahuya is an unincorporated community in Mason County, Washington, United States. It is located on the Hood Canal at the mouth of the Tahuya River. Tahuya, whose name comes from a Twana term meaning "that done", features a number of recreational areas. The ZIP Code for Tahuya is 98588.

Want to know if a property in Tahuya is a good investment?

Enter an address to get instant revenue potential and comps.

startup landing logo

Copyright © 2026 HomeRun Analytics, Inc

Explore

HomeCountry ExplorerProperty Analyzer

Resources

Market ComparatorRegulationsBlog

Trusted by STR investors in 50+ U.S. states

Built by investors, for investors

STRProfitMap® is a registered trademark of HomeRun Analytics, Inc