When I first dove into the issue of short-term rentals, it wasn’t because of a headline, it’s because I personally feel the effects. I attended the City’s Short-Term Rental Workshop in October not as a politician, but as someone who lives on the Seawall in District 6, who walks our sidewalks, whose neighbors are affected daily, and whose community is shaped by the decisions we make together
In the last decade, short-term rentals have gone from a niche part of Galveston’s lodging landscape to a defining feature of our housing market. Data collected by Vision Galveston shows that around five years ago, there were approximately 2,300 short-term rental units on the island. Between April 2019 and February 2020, that number skyrocketed from roughly 2,200 to 4,000 units in a few months, a growth of nearly 125%. Current registered listings edged around 5,000.
District 6 once again feels this disproportionately. In 2021, roughly 2,400 STRs were concentrated here, nearly half of all STR units are in District 6, more than in any other part of the city. These aren’t simply homeowners renting a spare room while they travel. According to STR mapping analysis from Vision Galveston, 98% of listings are entire homes, and only about 7% of registered STRs are owner-occupied, meaning most properties are owned by investors, often from outside our community. More than 1 in 5 registered STR owners are businesses (LLCs, etc.). Looking ahead, current trends are expected to continue throughout 2026.
There are real economic benefits tied to STRs. A recent review of Airbnb data found figures like thousands of active Airbnb listings and average annual revenues in the tens of thousands per property, with median daily rates near $243–$298 and strong seasonality driving peak occupancy in the summer months. Additionally, STRs continue to contribute a significant portion of hotel occupancy taxes, one local report notes STRs provided around half of all such taxes in recent years, bolstering the city’s ability to invest in infrastructure, public safety, and services.
But these statistics only tell part of the story. They don’t capture the long-term impact of having thousands of short-term rentals in residential neighborhoods. They don’t show parents who can’t find long-term rental housing for their family. They don’t show young professionals priced out of homeownership because investors buy homes as revenue generators instead of places to live. National studies have connected rapid STR growth to housing shortages, rising home prices and rents, and disruptions in community cohesion in other popular destinations.
And the impact is real here. Neighborhood residents consistently raise concerns about noise, trash, parking congestion, and enforcement gaps tied to STR guests, issues that echo at community meetings and in City Council conversations. While STR supporters rightly point to the economic benefits and tourism value they bring, residents urge balance: quality tourism that strengthens Galveston without undermining neighborhood stability.
Across the country, other thriving tourist communities have taken thoughtful approaches. Some coastal towns cap the percentage of housing units that can be used as STRs to protect long-term rental availability while still permitting vibrant vacation stays. Others prioritize registration and enforcement mechanisms that ensure compliance with safety, noise, and parking standards. A few communities tie STR licensing to demonstrated local ownership or incentivize conversions back to long-term housing when shortages become acute.
These aren’t silver bullets, but they are proven tools that start with data, community dialogue, and a clear goal: keep Galveston a place where people live with dignity and where visitors can enjoy our unique culture.
That brings me to a story from my childhood that still shapes how I approach this work. When I was young, my mom drove an old station wagon that had a nasty habit: it would catch fire under the hood. The first time it happened, I bolted out of the car and saved myself. But my mom took this less-than-favorable circumstance and turned it into a lesson. She wasn’t worried about herself; she told me to go back and help my baby sister get out safely. That became a life-long lesson: don’t look away from what needs help. Step into it.
Sometimes short-term rentals can feel like a blazing fire, threatening homes, affordability, and community, but solutions might already exist if we’re willing to look back, listen, and help. Other cities have faced similar dilemmas and found balanced pathways forward. By combining compassionate enforcement, smart planning, and ongoing community engagement, we can navigate these challenges without choosing sides between residents and responsible tourism, because they aren’t mutually exclusive.
Galveston will work when accountability and empathy walk hand in hand. We can protect our neighborhoods and preserve the economic benefits that responsible vacation stays bring. That balance is what District 6 deserves and what I’ll work hard to help our city achieve.
Reference Source: Vision Galveston