

The Mayor's office said it will review the lawsuit.Īirbnb said that in the first week of July, more than 5,500 short-term rentals are reserved to host more than 10,000 guests in New York City. OSE application reviews will ensure "that only a miniscule number of hosts will ever be granted a registration," Airbnb said in the filing.Ī New York City spokesperson said in a statement that the administration of Mayor Eric Adams "is committed to protecting safety and community livability for residents, preserving permanent housing stock, and ensuring our hospitality sector can continue to recover and thrive."

The short-term rental company is requesting that the court blocks the enforcement of "Local Law 18". The law, according to the filing, will make it more difficult for hosts to do business, requiring them to register with the New York City Mayor's Office of Special Enforcement (OSE) and to certify that they will comply with "the maze of complex regulations" for zoning, multiple dwelling law and housing maintenance code as well as construction code. The company's filing in the New York State Supreme Court says New York's city council, through legislation passed in 2022, effectively implemented "its most extreme and oppressive regulatory scheme yet, which operates as a de facto ban against short-term rentals in New York."Īirbnb, in a letter to hosts, said "today’s filing comes only after exhausting all available paths for a sensible solution with the City." Some of them require hosts to obtain licenses and pay registration fees or limit short-term rentals in business districts. NEW YORK, June 1 (Reuters) - Airbnb Inc (ABNB.O) on Thursday filed a lawsuit against New York City over a new law it called a "de facto ban" against short-term rentals set to go into effect in July, which the company says will limit the number of people who can host rentals in the city.Ĭity councils around the United States are increasingly introducing ordinances to regulate short-term rentals.
