Buying a vacation home in Lake Tahoe: the complete buyer's guide
Lake Tahoe is consistently ranked among the top second home markets in the United States, and for good reason. The lake straddles the California-Nevada border at 6,225 feet elevation, offers 72 miles of shoreline, and draws buyers who want year-round recreation anchored by two distinct peak seasons: world-class skiing in winter and lake access in summer. For buyers weighing whether to purchase, a few fundamentals stand out: The short answer: yes, Lake Tahoe is a strong vacation home market, but buyers who do well are those who understand the specific submarket dynamics, particularly around short-term rental regulations and operating costs, before they buy. More on both below. Ready to explore your options? Start with our guide on There is no single "Lake Tahoe" — the area encompasses several distinct communities across two states, each with its own character, price range, and regulatory environment. The right location depends on how you want to use the home, whether you're focused on ski access or lakefront living, and whether short-term rental income is part of your plan. North Lake Tahoe is anchored by Tahoe City, Kings Beach, Tahoe Vista, and the surrounding unincorporated Placer County communities. The North Shore is prized for its quieter atmosphere, closer proximity to Palisades Tahoe (formerly Squaw Valley) and Alpine Meadows, and direct lake access from towns like Tahoe City, which sits where the Truckee River meets the lake. Median prices in North Lake Tahoe communities are generally in the $900K-$1.3M range for homes suitable as vacation rentals, with luxury lakefront properties commanding significantly more.For families looking for family vacation homes in Lake Tahoe, the North Shore's walkable town centers, calmer lake coves, and access to multiple ski resorts make it a natural fit. South Lake Tahoe is the largest city on the lake, straddling the California-Nevada border at the base of Heavenly Mountain Resort. It offers the most amenities of any Tahoe community, such as restaurants, shopping, casinos on the Nevada side, and direct beach access, and is typically the most affordable major submarket, with median sale prices around $575K-$715K depending on the period. South Lake Tahoe has historically attracted buyers interested in vacation rental income, though its short-term rental regulatory environment has changed significantly in recent years (covered in the next section). For buyers focused on personal use, the South Shore's combination of ski-in/ski-out access at Heavenly, lakefront parks, and walkable amenities makes it one of the most versatile locations on the lake. Incline Village sits on Nevada's North Shore, tucked against the slopes of Mt. Rose and Diamond Peak. It occupies a distinct category among Tahoe communities: luxury mountain estates with true Nevada advantages, including no state income tax. Median home prices in Incline Village remain above $1.5M, with the high-end market staying stable due to constrained supply. For buyers seeking luxury vacation homes in Lake Tahoe, Incline Village's combination of mountain privacy, Nevada tax benefits, and more permissive short-term rental rules makes it worth serious consideration. The Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival, mountain biking, and two private beaches exclusive to residents round out the lifestyle. Truckee sits just north of the lake in the Sierra Nevada, roughly 12 miles from North Shore. Its charming Old West downtown, access to seven ski resorts (including Palisades Tahoe), and slightly lower price points than lakefront communities have made it a favorite for buyers who prioritize ski access over direct lake views. Olympic Valley, home to Palisades Tahoe base, is within 30 minutes of Truckee and is widely regarded as one of the best ski destinations in the U.S. Short-term rental (STR) regulations are among the most consequential (and most misunderstood) factors in Tahoe vacation home buying. The rules vary dramatically depending on which jurisdiction your home falls in, and they have changed significantly in recent years. Buying without understanding the STR landscape in your target area is one of the most common and costly mistakes Tahoe buyers make. South Lake Tahoe's STR history is the most turbulent around the lake. The city declined to appeal and passed a new STR ordinance in June 2025, which took effect July 17, 2025, capping STR permits in residential areas at 900 and issuing them on a first-priority basis to previous permittees. As of April 2026, updated amendments replaced the earlier buffer rules with the 900-permit cap system. The bottom line for South Lake Tahoe buyers: STR permitting is now legal citywide but capped, meaning permit availability is not guaranteed. Non-permitted properties in South Lake Tahoe are effectively non-starters for rental income strategies. Placer County, which covers most of North Lake Tahoe including Tahoe City, Kings Beach, and Tahoe Vista, operates under a cap of 3,900 STR permits in unincorporated eastern Placer County. As of early 2025, roughly 500 permits remained available before the cap, though that number changes. The framework is established and broad, covering multiple desirable North Shore communities, making it one of the more reliable STR markets around the lake for buyers who verify permit availability before purchasing. Incline Village operates under Washoe County jurisdiction on the Nevada side. There is no countywide permit cap and no waitlist; owners simply obtain a Washoe County business license and register for Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) collection. The process typically takes a few weeks. This regulatory flexibility makes Incline Village significantly more accessible for buyers whose ownership plan includes rental income, compared to California-side communities. Truckee operates its own STR permitting program with a cap of 1,255 certificates. As of early 2025, that cap had already been reached, and a waitlist is in effect. Additionally, new owners face a 365-day waiting period after a home sale before they can even apply for an STR permit. STR regulations affect traditional rental investors heavily, but they have almost no impact on co-ownership buyers through Pacaso. Pacaso homes are used exclusively by owners and their guests; they are never rented out. This means Pacaso owners are entirely insulated from the permit caps, lottery systems, and regulatory uncertainty that affect traditional Tahoe vacation rentals. You can own in any of these jurisdictions and focus on enjoying your home without navigating the permit landscape. Tahoe's mountain climate and dual-season demand create an ownership cost structure that is meaningfully different from beach or desert second home markets. Understanding these costs upfront, and planning for them, is essential to getting the full picture of what ownership actually looks like. Lake Tahoe receives an average of 200-plus inches of snow per year. Snow removal is not optional; it's a safety and access requirement. Owners of standalone homes are responsible for their own driveways, walkways, roofs, and decks. Most Tahoe locals recommend setting up a seasonal snow removal contract before the first storm of the year, particularly for out-of-area owners who may not be present during early-season events. Budget for $4,000-$8,000 annually for contracted snow removal services, depending on property size, driveway length, and snow year intensity. Condo and HOA communities often include driveway plowing in monthly dues, but private decks, entry stairs, and unit-specific areas are frequently the owner's responsibility. Properties that are not continuously occupied and heated during winter require winterization to prevent frozen and burst pipes. The process involves draining water systems and adding antifreeze to traps, and typically costs $300-$600 per winterization. For remote owners who aren't present through the coldest months (December through March), proper winterization is non-negotiable. Tahoe homes face extreme temperature variations. Propane or natural gas heating for a 2,000-square-foot home can run $300-$600 per month during peak winter months. Older homes with vaulted ceilings and less efficient windows have significantly higher heating costs. Electricity typically adds another $150-$400 monthly. Semi-annual HVAC servicing runs $150-$300 per visit, with full system replacements costing $3,000-$15,000+ for larger homes. Condos, resort communities, and gated neighborhoods typically carry HOA fees of $4,800-$14,400 annually, covering shared amenities, exterior maintenance, and sometimes snow removal. Standalone homes outside HOAs don't face those dues but absorb the equivalent costs individually. Annual maintenance for vacation homes in Tahoe's harsh climate typically runs 3%-5% of property value. The The full cost of ownership adds up quickly. For buyers who want Tahoe access without absorbing 52 weeks of ownership costs for a fraction of the use, Financing a vacation home in Lake Tahoe follows the same general framework as any second home purchase, but with a few nuances worth knowing. Read our full guide to If you plan to use the property personally (rather than as a pure investment rental), you may qualify for second home mortgage rates, which are typically 0.25-0.5 percentage points higher than primary residence rates. To qualify, lenders generally require that the property be at least 50 miles from your primary home, that you're not renting it out for more than 14 days a year (if you want the favorable tax treatment), and that you intend to occupy it yourself for some portion of the year. Second home mortgages typically require a minimum 10% down payment, with 20% or more being more common in practice for Tahoe's price points. Larger down payments reduce the interest rate and improve approval odds. Our guide to If you plan to rent the property for more than 14 days a year, lenders may classify it as an investment property rather than a second home. Investment property loans typically require 20-25% down and carry higher rates. For buyers in STR-heavy markets like South Lake Tahoe who are depending on rental income to offset carrying costs, this classification is important to understand early in the financing process. For buyers purchasing a Pacaso share, For most people weighing whether to buy a vacation home in Lake Tahoe, the math on full ownership raises a question worth asking honestly: will you actually use it enough to justify the cost? According to Pacaso's own Second Home Sentiment Report, only about 25% of second home owners used their property more than four weeks per year. For a $1.5M Tahoe home carrying $80,000-$100,000 in annual costs, that's a significant expense for limited use, and that's before the management burden of coordinating snow removal, maintenance, and winterization from afar. There are three reasons co-ownership is particularly well-suited to Tahoe specifically: Explore
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