A shire council on Victoria's coastline plans to introduce bylaws banning tourists staying in short-term accommodation from hanging out on outdoor decking, balconies and pools after 10:00pm.

The Mornington Peninsula Shire Council's proposed new laws would require home owners who rent their properties through platforms like Airbnb and Stayz to register their properties with council and agree to a code of conduct.

The code consists of 12 rules including:

Outdoor areas including swimming pools, spas, outdoor decking and balconies are not to be used between 10:00pm and 8:00am seven days a week

Outdoor areas including swimming pools, spas, outdoor decking and balconies are not to be used between 10:00pm and 8:00am seven days a week Visitors are not permitted between 10:00pm and 8:00am seven days a week

Visitors are not permitted between 10:00pm and 8:00am seven days a week The dwelling and any connected land cannot be used as a party house (bucks' or hens' nights, birthdays or any other type of party)

The dwelling and any connected land cannot be used as a party house (bucks' or hens' nights, birthdays or any other type of party) The owner must control and be responsible for any visitors to the occupants at the dwelling

The owner must control and be responsible for any visitors to the occupants at the dwelling The maximum numbers of vehicles that can be parked must not exceed the available space on the land

The maximum numbers of vehicles that can be parked must not exceed the available space on the land Additional accommodation is not allowed on site by way of tents, caravans, campervans or the like

Local home owner Neil Goodridge, who rents out the top half of his house to tourists through Airbnb, told ABC Radio Melbourne the proposed rules were bizarre.

"I've got an old house that's quite close to the road, and out the front I've got a lovely deck and people just go out there and have a chat and things," he said.

"At 10:00pm I'm supposed to police it — it's my home and I live downstairs — so I'm supposed to come up at 10:00pm and say 'lights out, go to bed'."

Neil Goodridge says the proposed law will require him to police tourists' behaviour on his deck. ( Supplied: Neil Goodridge )

But Mornington Shire Council Mayor Bryan Payne defended the proposed law as an "an innovative process to curb a very important problem".

"Mornington Peninsula, like all resort areas, have got a real problem, just next door to my place we had this going on for 12 months, they just have parties all night and you ring the police and nothing happens," he said.

"We've had 87 complaints in the last 12 months about these particular properties — one poor lady was put into hospital with stress because of the whole thing, other people have been threatened.

"Whilst people are having these parties and the neighbours have to put up with it, the owners are sitting back in Melbourne oblivious to what's going on."

Councillor Payne was backed up on social media and ABC Radio Melbourne, with a number of local listeners supporting the ban.

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"When 20 teenagers descend for schoolies and live next door from you for a week and create mayhem, you've got to have someone do something about it," one person wrote in a text message to ABC Radio Melbourne.

The shire is an hour's drive from Melbourne, and is bordered almost entirely by coastline, as well as boasting vineyards, olive groves and 20 golf courses.

Tourism employs more than 42,000 people in the area, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, with an additional 3,160 jobs supported by the industry.

Mr Goodridge said targeting holiday makers was not a good idea for the region.

"There's no holiday romances, you can't have someone you met at the beach and say come back to my place or anything, it really is incredible," he said.

"It's also entirely discriminatory, people that are lucky enough to have a house down here can do what they like, the rules don't apply, it's only for short-stay people, all the holiday maker tourists that come here."

The council is accepting feedback on the plan until December 7.