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Maui’s Bill 9 Explained: What Hawaii’s New Vacation Rental Law Means for the Big Island and Beyond

Kai Ioh | December 2025

Maui County just took a decisive step that every Hawaii property owner should be paying attention to.

Earlier this month, Mayor Richard Bissen signed Bill 9 into law, following final approval by the Maui County Council. The goal is clear and direct: restore housing availability for residents by phasing out certain short-term vacation rentals in apartment-zoned areas.

While Bill 9 applies only to Maui County, its implications reach far beyond one island. For buyers, sellers, and investors on the Big Island and across Hawaii, this legislation signals a broader shift in how counties may approach short-term vacation rental (STVR) regulation moving forward.

What Is Maui’s Bill 9?

Bill 9 is a zoning correction law.

It eliminates a long-standing exemption that allowed transient vacation rentals (TVRs) to operate in apartment-zoned districts, areas originally intended for long-term residential housing. These properties are often referred to as Minatoya List units.

Under Bill 9:

  • Apartment-zoned properties may no longer operate as short-term rentals unless rezoned
  • More than 6,000 units are expected to transition back to long-term residential use
  • Hotel, resort-zoned properties, timeshares, and licensed bed-and-breakfasts remain unaffected

Key takeaway: Bill 9 does not eliminate tourism or short-term rentals on Maui. It realigns zoning with its original residential purpose.

Why Did Maui Pass Bill 9?

The urgency intensified after the Maui wildfires, which exposed and worsened an already critical housing shortage.

According to Maui County:

  • Short-term rentals account for 21% of Maui’s total housing stock, the highest percentage in Hawaii
  • 94% of affected units are owned by non-residents, many living outside of Hawaii
  • Thousands of local households could afford these units if returned to the long-term market

County leadership framed Bill 9 as the fastest way to add housing inventory without new construction, while prioritizing residents who live and work on Maui.

What Bill 9 Changes — and What It Doesn’t

What Changes

  • Apartment-zoned short-term rentals will be phased out
  • Phase-out deadlines range from 2029 to 2031, depending on location
  • Owners may pursue rezoning into future H-3 or H-4 hotel districts, subject to approval

What Stays the Same

  • Approximately 6,500 TVR parcels countywide remain legal
  • Thousands of hotel units and over 2,400 timeshares and B&Bs continue operating
  • Tourism remains a central pillar of Maui’s economy

This distinction is critical and often misunderstood.

Why Other Hawaii Counties Are Watching Closely

Maui has always been the first county in Hawaii to enact STVR restrictions. Oahu, Kauai and Big Island followed Maui in the past.

On the Big Island, Hawaii County recently adopted Bill 46, scheduled to take effect in March 2026. While far less sweeping than Maui’s Bill 9, it introduces new compliance standards and reinforces the direction of travel.

The broader pattern is clear:

  • Counties are under pressure to address housing shortages
  • Short-term rentals are increasingly part of the policy conversation
  • Zoning, taxation, and enforcement are becoming more structured

The Big Island Reality: A Different Ownership Profile

The Big Island is not Maui.

Here, many short-term rental owners are:

  • Resident investors
  • Second-home owners
  • Families using limited rentals to offset maintenance, insurance, and property tax costs

Short-term rentals also provide meaningful employment for:

  • Cleaners
  • Property managers
  • Landscapers
  • Maintenance professionals

At the same time, it’s also true that some operators have taken advantage of loopholes, operating without proper permits or paying incorrect property tax classifications. That imbalance creates frustration — and fuels calls for reform.

The challenge is finding a measured balance that supports housing needs without undermining local livelihoods.

Do Short-Term Rental Restrictions Hurt Tourism?

Global data suggests otherwise.

Cities such as New York, Amsterdam, and Barcelona have implemented strict short-term rental limits. In each case:

  • Short-term rental supply declined sharply
  • Hotel occupancy and revenue increased
  • Visitor demand shifted — it did not disappear

Maui estimates a potential $60 million reduction in tax revenue, but officials describe it as a return to prior-year levels rather than a collapse.

For the Big Island, this raises important questions about revenue mix, workforce transition, and long-term planning.

What Property Owners Should Be Thinking About Now

Whether you own property on Maui, the Big Island, or elsewhere in Hawaii, this is a moment to pause and reassess.

Ask yourself:

  • What is my property’s zoning?
  • Is my rental use compliant today — and in 2026 or beyond?
  • Am I classified correctly for property tax purposes?
  • How would future regulations affect long-term value?

Regulatory clarity is becoming just as important as location and views.

There are no simple answers. Housing affordability, tourism, local jobs, and investment realities are deeply connected. Each island has its own nuances, and one-size-fits-all solutions rarely work well in Hawaii.

Here .

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