Nobody can tell you how many short-term rentals are in Buncombe County, or how much tax they really pay. That sounds like a scandal. It is something stranger: the law working exactly as written, keeping the money it collects away from the housing everyone wants to spend it on.
Here is a question that should have an easy answer, and does not. How many short-term rentals are there in Buncombe County? Nobody can tell you. Back in 2023, Asheville Watchdog went looking and found the county does not audit them, cannot count them, and cannot even pull the tax they pay apart from what the hotels pay. Nobody has publicly checked since.
This is not a small corner of the economy. Short-term rentals are a $232 million-a-year business here, more than a third of all the lodging sold, and at the county's 6 percent room tax that is something like $14 million a year in public money. Most of it arrives in a lump sum from Airbnb, filed under a single San Francisco address, with no way to tie a dollar to a house.
That should feel wrong, and the honest answer is that no one can promise you it isn't. Book through Airbnb or Vrbo and the tax is collected automatically, so most of the money almost certainly comes in. But no one audits it, no one can match a payment to a house, and anything booked off-platform runs on the honor system. Whether every dollar owed actually gets paid is not a question anyone in Buncombe County can answer. The town cannot fully see this money, and it cannot spend it on housing. Both of those were decided in Raleigh.
The hotel tax is real, and it is large, and by law almost none of it can go to housing.
Start with the part that sounds impossible, because it is the key to the rest.
The only real government count of short-term rentals here is the City of Asheville's permit roll, and it reaches only the owner-occupied homestays inside the city, under a thousand of them. Everything else, the whole-house rentals and every listing out in the county, goes uncounted. Not by sloppiness. A 2022 court decision, Schroeder versus Wilmington, held that North Carolina forbids a local government from making rentals register at all. The best full-county number, around 5,400, is an estimate a private company builds by scraping Airbnb and Vrbo from the outside.
So how does the county tax rentals it cannot count? It does not. The websites do. Under state law, Airbnb and Vrbo add the 6 percent at checkout and remit it for their hosts, and Buncombe has taken Airbnb's money that way since 2015. But the payment arrives blind. Asheville Watchdog reported the mechanics in 2023: under a confidential 2015 agreement, Airbnb pays in a lump sum that does not name the properties, filed under one address, 888 Brannan Street, its San Francisco headquarters. There is no public list of the county's five thousand-plus rentals, and the tax collector said plainly that the county does not typically audit the people who remit. Book a room off-platform and the whole duty falls to the owner, on the honor system.
So why does a nine-figure business run on the honor system? Not because anyone forgot to build the checks. The checks are illegal or bargained away. The registry that would let the county see who is renting is barred by the same state law that stops any North Carolina town from making rentals sign up. And Airbnb collects the tax only under that confidential 2015 deal, the one that lets it pay in a lump the county is not allowed to open. The state kept the money and gave up the receipts. Asheville Watchdog has reported that the travel industry itself largely shapes North Carolina's room-tax law, which is part of why the rules leave so little for anyone to check.
So who is responsible for the tax on a Buncombe short-term rental? No one you can point to. The platform collects it but names nothing. The owner owes it but appears on no list. The county banks it but cannot audit it. The tourism authority spends it but never sees where it came from. The dollars are real. Whether all of them show up, no one can say, and the system was built so no one has to.
The tax is real and large. What the law lets it fund is the whole story.
The occupancy tax runs about $34 million in a normal year by the authority's own projections, less since Helene knocked it down to $22.8 million, now climbing back. It does not enter the county's general fund. It goes to the Tourism Development Authority, the board that runs Explore Asheville. And state law fences it to one job: bring in more visitors. That is not a conspiracy against Asheville. It is how visitor taxes work across most tourism states, so the money guests pay is not pulled into the services that property and sales taxes already cover. Housing sits outside the fence by design.
There is one narrow opening. In 2022 the county's legislators cut the marketing share from three-quarters to two-thirds and set the rest aside for the community, part of it in a new pot called the LIFT fund. Advocates tested it. In 2024 a housing group asked LIFT for $1.5 million to build apartments at a site called Star Point, and more than two thousand people signed on, arguing that housing the workers who staff the hotels is tourism spending. The authority said no. It funded a greenway and cut the housing out, and its president would not even say whether housing could ever qualify, because the lodging industry had warned that paying for it could draw a lawsuit.
Then Raleigh closed even that, and the trigger is worth knowing. In May 2026 the state Supreme Court sided with Currituck County on the coast, ruling a county could stretch room-tax money to cover public safety. The legislature answered within weeks: Senate Bill 484, a statewide law, and the governor signed it in June. It named affordable housing, directly, as something occupancy-tax money may not fund, alongside public safety, water, and schools. One of Asheville's own senators said it slams the door pretty hard. Vic Isley, who runs the tourism authority, put it flatter: Senate Bill 484 makes it very clear, she said, that you cannot use the occupancy tax for housing. Now the statute says so out loud.
If you want tourism to pay for housing, this is the honest, harder ask.
Be plain about the size of it, too. Even if every dollar could go to housing, and it cannot, thirty-odd million a year is real money but not a cure. The region is short more than 34,000 homes over five years, and the city's own $8.4 million in 2026 bought its way toward about 205 units. Tourism money turned toward housing would help at the edges. It would not close a gap like that on its own.
So the slogan needs an edit. Tax the tourists is already done. The step that would actually move money is narrower, and it will not fit on a sign. The same law that bars housing leaves one door open: a local act, passed in Raleigh for Buncombe by name, can grant an exception. That is the real lever, and it runs uphill, because the legislature that would have to pass it just voted 109 to 3 the other way. Anyone who tells you the county can fix this on its own is pointing at the wrong building.
Asheville already taxes its visitors, and the take runs into the tens of millions. But state law fences almost all of it to a single job, bringing in more visitors, and the one crack that reaches the community pays for buildings, not homes. The hotel tax is not a solution someone is hiding from you. It is a solution the law does not allow, and in 2026 the state wrote that ban down in plain words.
That is worth knowing before the next council meeting, because it aims the anger at the right place. The way to make tourism pay for housing is not to demand the county do what it cannot. It is to win an exception in Raleigh, from the same legislature that just made the rule stricter. That is the harder ask, and it is the only one that ends with a key in someone's hand.
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