Looking to rent your home out for Super Bowl XVII in February? There’s a sales tax on that in Minneapolis and, now, in St. Paul.

Following months of study and discussion, the St. Paul City Council on Wednesday approved a series of tax, fee, parking and licensing requirements related to short-term home rentals such as Airbnb and VRBO. The Minneapolis City Council approved a similar package of requirements on Friday.

The St. Paul council supported the rules 6-1, with Dan Bostrom casting the sole dissenting vote.

Airbnb, however, said that it was “disappointed” with the ordinance’s final form and hinted at a legal challenge.

In St. Paul, hosts who rent out their houses or apartments are now expected to pay the city a $40 annual licensing fee, which was reduced from a previous proposal. Short-term rental platform companies such as Airbnb will pay the city a $10,000 annual platform licensing fee, which was increased substantially from the staff recommendation.

The units will also be subject to city inspection, sales taxes and parking requirements.

The St. Paul rules allow owners of single-family homes, duplexes and triplexes to lease out one short-term rental unit. Owners of four-, six- and eight-unit buildings may rent out half their units as short-term rentals.

If a building is owner-occupied and the owner is present during the rental, all of the units in a duplex, triplex or fourplex may be leased out as short-term rentals.

For larger apartment buildings, four short-term rentals are allowed, or more with a conditional use permit from the city, which would be issued to building owners on a case-by-case basis.

The regulations drew some criticism from hosts who felt they went too far to limit the number of short-term rentals in a building, as well as opposition from bed-and-breakfast owners, who felt they didn’t go far enough.

“We’re setting up businesses being operated in residential neighborhoods,” Bostrom said in opposition to the measure.

San Francisco-based Airbnb issued a statement criticizing the ordinance.

“On behalf of our Saint Paul hosts, we are disappointed the city is moving forward with an ordinance that will lead to low compliance and imposes platform requirements in violation of federal law,” company spokesman Benjamin Breit wrote in an email to the Pioneer Press. “We will consider all legal options to protect innovation and the privacy of our Twin Cities host community.”

Officials have noted that short-term rentals have proliferated across the country and provide an important revenue source for hosts and tourism venues alike. Despite their popularity, they were previously unregulated by city ordinances and technically illegal.