Rules & Licenses
Queens Short-Term Rentals Need the City Registration Check
New York City's short-term rental registration law can affect hosts, buildings, and booking platforms.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
A Queens room rental or vacation listing is not just a platform setting. New York City’s Short-Term Rental Registration Law requires hosts of covered short-term rentals to register with the Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement, and booking platforms are restricted from processing unregistered covered transactions.
The hard part is that legality depends on the building, occupancy, host presence, stay length, city registration status, and sometimes the rules of a co-op, condo, lease, or mortgage. NYC 311 points hosts back to the registration requirement, but the address still needs its own review.
Before buying a two-family house with projected nightly-rental income, or before counting on a spare room to cover the mortgage, check the OSE page and the building rules. A spreadsheet built on illegal short-term rental income is not a housing plan. It is just a very tidy mistake.
Queens also has a lot of housing forms packed close together: detached homes, two-families, co-ops, condos, basement units, and apartment buildings.
A spare-room idea in Astoria may not have the same risk profile as a whole-unit listing near JFK. The registration question belongs with the building facts.