If you own property in Sherwood, Oregon and you’re thinking about listing it on Airbnb, VRBO, or any other short-term rental platform, you need to understand the rules before you start collecting bookings. Sherwood short term rental rules have specific requirements around permits, taxes, zoning, and operations — and getting them wrong can cost you in fines, penalties, or even a forced shutdown of your listing.
As a real estate investor who actively manages a portfolio of both short-term and long-term rentals in the greater Newberg and Willamette Valley area, I’ve navigated Oregon’s STR landscape firsthand. Here’s a practical, up-to-date breakdown of everything you need to know about Sherwood short term rental rules in 2026.
What Counts as a Short-Term Rental in Sherwood?
A short-term rental (STR) in Oregon — including Sherwood — is generally defined as any residential dwelling rented out for periods of 30 consecutive nights or fewer. This includes entire homes, accessory dwelling units (ADUs), and rooms within a primary residence listed on platforms like Airbnb, VRBO, Hipcamp, or similar services.
If your rental period exceeds 30 nights, different landlord-tenant laws apply, and you’ll exit the short-term rental regulatory framework entirely.
Sherwood Short Term Rental Permit Requirements
One of the most important Sherwood short term rental rules to understand is the city permit requirement. Before you accept your first guest, you must obtain a permit from the City of Sherwood. Operating without one puts you at risk of fines and forced removal from rental platforms.
Here’s what the permit process involves:
- City STR Permit: Required for all short-term rental operators within Sherwood city limits. The permit fee is approximately $100.
- Business License: You’ll also need a City of Sherwood business license to legally operate your rental. The application requires detailed information about your property, proof of insurance, and in some cases a background check.
- Oregon Department of Revenue Registration: All STR operators must register with the Oregon Department of Revenue to collect and remit the state’s Transient Lodging Tax. As of January 1, 2026, new business registrations are processed through Oregon’s Revenue Online system under the “Register for a business tax” portal.
Failing to secure any one of these three elements puts your STR operation out of compliance with Sherwood short term rental rules.
Sherwood Short Term Rental Tax Requirements
Taxes are a major piece of the Sherwood STR puzzle. As a host, you are responsible for collecting and remitting the following:
Oregon State Transient Lodging Tax (TLT): Oregon levies a 1.5% state transient lodging tax on all short-term rentals. This applies statewide and is non-negotiable regardless of where your property is located.
City of Sherwood Transient Lodging Tax: Guests who book Airbnb listings within Sherwood city limits pay an additional 3% transient lodging tax on the listing price, including any cleaning fees, for reservations of 30 nights or fewer.
Combined Tax Obligation: When you add the state and local rates together, hosts in Sherwood are looking at a minimum of 4.5% in combined lodging taxes, and potentially more depending on Washington County rules applicable to your specific location.
Good news for platform-listed hosts: Airbnb automatically collects and remits certain lodging taxes on behalf of hosts in Oregon, including the Sherwood city transient lodging tax. However, if you book guests through your own website, direct referrals, or platforms that don’t collect on your behalf, the responsibility to collect and remit these taxes falls entirely on you. Always verify with your platform what taxes they are handling before assuming you’re covered.
Zoning and Operational Rules
Sherwood short term rental rules include zoning restrictions that determine where STRs are permitted. Not every residential zone in Sherwood allows short-term rentals, and operating in a restricted zone — even with a permit — can result in enforcement action.
Key operational considerations include:
- Zoning compliance: Your property must be in a zone that permits short-term rental use. Contact the City of Sherwood Community Development Department to confirm your property’s zoning status before investing.
- Occupancy limits: Sherwood places limits on the number of guests permitted at an STR property. These limits are tied to the size of the dwelling and are strictly enforced.
- Annual rental day caps: Some residential zones in Sherwood restrict the number of nights per year a property can be rented on a short-term basis.
- Noise and nuisance ordinances: STR operators are responsible for ensuring their guests comply with city noise ordinances. Repeat violations can jeopardize your permit.
- Insurance: Most standard homeowners’ insurance policies do not cover short-term rental activity. Before your first booking, talk to your insurance provider about STR-specific coverage or a landlord policy that covers transient guests.
Sherwood Is in Washington County — Here’s Why That Matters
Sherwood is an incorporated city located within Washington County, which has its own layer of regulations for unincorporated areas. If your property is within Sherwood city limits, city ordinances govern your STR — not county-level regulations. However, if you own property just outside city limits in the surrounding unincorporated Washington County area, the county’s STR framework applies instead.
Washington County’s unincorporated areas have historically had fewer STR restrictions, but that distinction matters: always confirm whether your address falls inside or outside Sherwood city limits before determining which set of rules applies to you.
The Investor Perspective: Is Sherwood a Good STR Market?
As someone who has run short-term rentals in the Willamette Valley and works with investors throughout the region, I’ll give you my honest take: Sherwood has real STR potential, but you need to go in with eyes open.
Sherwood sits in the heart of the Tualatin Valley, with easy access to Portland, wine country, and outdoor recreation. It draws travelers looking for a quieter alternative to urban Portland accommodations, and demand has grown steadily as the area has developed. That said, inventory of STR-compliant properties is constrained by zoning, which actually works in favor of existing operators who’ve done the work to get properly permitted.
Before purchasing a property specifically for STR use in Sherwood, I always recommend:
- Confirming zoning approval with the city before closing
- Running a realistic income projection that accounts for all taxes, permit fees, and vacancy
- Modeling both a STR scenario and a long-term rental scenario so you understand your fallback if regulations tighten
- Talking to a local agent who actively invests in the market — not just one who theorizes about it
Thinking About Investing in the Sherwood or Newberg Area?
If you’re exploring short-term rental opportunities anywhere in the greater Newberg-Sherwood-Willamette Valley corridor, I’d love to connect. I’m not just a realtor — I’m an active investor who manages my own STR and long-term rental portfolio. I understand the numbers, the regulations, and the local market dynamics because I live them every day.
Our team also hosts Newberg’s only real estate investor meetup — a monthly gathering of active investors, operators, and market watchers right here in the Willamette Valley. Whether you’re a seasoned investor scaling a portfolio or someone curious about your first short-term rental, this is the room you want to be in.
👉 Join the Newberg Investor Meetup on Eventbrite
Summary: Sherwood Short Term Rental Rules Checklist for 2026
Before you list your Sherwood property as a short-term rental, make sure you’ve covered each of these bases:
- ✅ Confirmed your property is in an STR-permitted zoning district
- ✅ Obtained a City of Sherwood STR permit (~$100)
- ✅ Applied for a City of Sherwood business license
- ✅ Registered with the Oregon Department of Revenue via Revenue Online
- ✅ Verified transient lodging tax collection (state 1.5% + city 3%)
- ✅ Reviewed occupancy limits and annual rental day caps for your zone
- ✅ Updated your homeowner’s insurance to cover STR activity
- ✅ Familiarized yourself with Sherwood’s noise and nuisance ordinances
Ready to Talk Real Estate?
Sherwood short term rental rules don’t have to be overwhelming — they just require the right preparation. Whether you’re buying, selling, or building an investment portfolio in the Newberg and greater Willamette Valley area, I’m here to help you make smart, informed moves.
John Laney | John Knows Newberg 📞 503-217-4229 🌐 johnlaney.exprealty.com 📘 Facebook 💼 LinkedIn ▶️ YouTube 📍 Nextdoor 🏠 BiggerPockets
John Laney is a licensed real estate agent with Assurance Team Real Estate (Epique Realty) specializing in sellers, investors, and commercial property in Newberg, Oregon and the surrounding Willamette Valley.
Disclaimer: This article is intended for informational purposes only and reflects regulations as understood in 2026. Short-term rental rules change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with the City of Sherwood Community Development Department and the Oregon Department of Revenue before operating a short-term rental.