Mill Valley is literally cutting checks to get more local workers living in town. The city is offering property owners a one-time cash incentive of up to $14,000 to lease underused homes and backyard cottages to people who work in Mill Valley. The one-year pilot, called Lease to Locals, is designed to turn vacant or short-term rental units into year-round housing for teachers, first responders and small-business employees while larger affordable housing projects inch along. City officials say the program is meant as a short-term tool to boost local rentals and ease some of the commuter traffic clogging Marin roads.
How the payments work
Incentives range from $3,500 for renting out a room in a shared home to $14,000 for leasing a full private unit. Payments are issued in two installments, one at move-in and another after the lease is completed. Each participating unit must be leased for at least 12 months, and new leases have to be established by May 2026. Rents are capped at $1,500 per month for a room and $4,500 per month for a full home.
The city’s program page also notes that the pilot is funded in part through local housing trust funds, according to the City of Mill Valley.
Who qualifies
To qualify as a “Qualified Tenant,” a renter must work at least 20 hours per week for an employer located in or serving the 94941 zip code. A “Qualified Household” must have an average adult income at or below 120% of area median income, which the city pegs at about $156,000.
There are also some guardrails. Owners cannot lease to blood relatives, and units are not eligible if they have had long-term tenants in place at any point during the past year. Placemate, the marketplace administering the pilot, manages the application process, checks eligibility and handles compliance for both owners and renters, according to Placemate.
Why the city launched it
Mill Valley officials say the pilot is a response to rising housing costs and a shrinking local workforce that has left schools and small businesses stretched thin. “Mill Valley is deeply committed to affirmatively furthering fair housing and to enabling our workforce the opportunity to live here,” Mayor Stephen Burke said in the city’s announcement, which also lays out other housing initiatives.
The program is backed in part by the Community Housing Foundation of Mill Valley and the Mill Valley Affordable Housing Trust Fund, according to the City of Mill Valley.
Placemate’s track record and early response
Placemate first developed this lease-incentive model in resort communities and has since expanded it to more than a dozen markets, where local officials say it has helped convert short-term stays into longer-term rentals.
In Mill Valley, the company estimates that somewhere between 1,000 and 1,200 properties are either vacant or only lightly used. Initial outreach for the program included roughly 5,600 postcards and letters sent to short-term rental operators, which produced 13 inquiries in the first 10 days of the pilot, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
The San Francisco Chronicle also points to the broader economic backdrop that makes this program feel urgent: average rents hovering near $3,500 a month and median home prices around $2 million.
What owners and renters should know
Funding for the pilot is limited, so owners interested in the incentive are encouraged to move quickly. Property owners must complete Placemate’s application, secure any required city business licenses and agree to mid-lease and end-of-lease checks before the final payment is released.
Prospective renters can create a profile with Placemate to be matched with eligible units. They will need to provide documentation of their employment and income to show they meet the program’s rules. The full guidelines, application, contact information and FAQs are available from Placemate.



