Lodging Guide
From ski resort condos to riverside cabins, historic inns to urban apartments — the valley offers a range of lodging options. Here's how to find the right one, and what to know before you book.
Lodging Types
Understanding which type of lodging you're booking — and what community it's in — matters more than the listing photos. Here's the breakdown.
The valley's signature lodging. Private cabins ranging from rustic to luxury, typically on acreage with mountain or river views. Found throughout Page, Warren, and Rockingham counties.
Verify: road access, septic capacity, and whether the property is in a private residential community or on standalone rural land.
Widely Available Research AccessProperties within purpose-built resort communities — primarily Massanutten Resort in McGaheysville. Condos, townhomes, and homes within a community designed for visitors.
These communities have visitor infrastructure, amenities, and welcome short-term guests by design. The safest category for first-time valley visitors.
Visitor-Friendly Amenities IncludedThe valley has a strong tradition of historic inns and B&Bs, particularly in Staunton, Luray, Lexington, and Strasburg. Licensed, regulated, and consistently excellent.
Staunton in particular has a nationally recognized collection of boutique lodging tied to its Victorian architecture and restaurant scene.
Licensed & Regulated Book EarlyHarrisonburg and Staunton both have growing urban STR markets — apartments, historic homes, and carriage houses in walkable downtown neighborhoods.
Harrisonburg requires an administrative permit for STR operators. Verify permit status before booking. Rockingham County (surrounding area) has additional regulations.
Harrisonburg Permitted Verify PermitRental Areas
The valley's rental landscape is not uniform. Use our companion rental guide for full detail on each area.
Several private residential subdivisions across the Rockingham, Page, and Warren County area are platted and recorded as residential communities, with covenants restricting use to residential purposes only. These are not vacation resort areas — they are neighborhoods where people live year-round. Some properties within these communities appear on Airbnb and VRBO despite the covenant restrictions. Booking one of them can mean a difficult neighbor experience, code enforcement issues, and a stay that doesn't match what you planned. Research the community, not just the property. Read the full guide to private communities →