

Lake Tahoe Cabins for Sale — Nevada Side
Showing 66 active listings · Updated July 1, 2026
Lake Tahoe currently has 66 active cabins for sale — nevada side, with a median list price of $1,417,500. A Tahoe cabin is one of Northern Nevada's most sought-after lifestyle purchases — most inventory clusters in Incline Village and the Zephyr Cove–Glenbrook corridor, where mountain-modern rebuilds trade alongside vintage A-frames. Nevada's zero state income tax makes a Nevada-side Tahoe cabin meaningfully cheaper to hold than a comparable California-side property.
What Should Lake Tahoe Home Buyers Know First?
- According to NNRMLS and RSAR, the median Incline Village or Crystal Bay cabin runs $1.5M–$2.5M (May–June 2026).
- According to Northern Nevada Regional MLS, Nevada-side Tahoe cabins sit 75–130 days on market — lakefront moves slower than near-lake inventory.
- According to Nevada Department of Taxation rules, Nevada has no state income tax and caps owner-occupied property tax growth at 3% a year — roughly $133K saved per year at $1M income versus California.
- Incline Village and Crystal Bay carry the deepest cabin inventory, plus IVGID private-beach and Diamond Peak ski privileges that transfer with the parcel.
- According to Washoe County and Douglas County short-term-rental programs, a permit is required before renting any Nevada-side cabin — confirm a specific address first.
What Do Lake Tahoe Neighborhood Stats Show?
- $163,607Median household incomeLiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
- 38Median ageLiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
- 6.0/10Avg school ratingLiveBy / GreatSchools
- 3.0Avg household sizeLiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
- 63%Owner-occupiedLiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
- 58%College degree+LiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
- 30%Households with childrenLiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
- 968PopulationLiveBy / American Census Survey 2023
NEWPRICE REDUCED $12kView 321 Ski Way, Unit 197, Incline Village, NV, 89451 — $875,000$875,000$12kCondoEst. $4,941/mo4 Beds3.5 Baths1,512 Sq. Ft.Built in 1971321 Ski Way, Unit 197Incline Village, NV, 89451Mountain Shadows Incline 5
PENDINGView 384 Maryanne Drive, Stateline, NV, 89449 — $849,000$849,000HouseEst. $4,794/mo2 Beds2.5 Baths1,044 Sq. Ft.0.42 AcresBuilt in 1977384 Maryanne DriveStateline, NV, 89449Kingsbury Village
NEWPRICE REDUCED $110kView 589 Freel Drive, Zephyr Cove, NV, 89448 — $1,490,000$1,490,000$110kHouseEst. $8,413/mo2 Beds2 Baths1,130 Sq. Ft.0.11 AcresBuilt in 1945589 Freel DriveZephyr Cove, NV, 89448Zephyr Cove
PENDINGView 426 Andria Drive, Stateline, NV, 89449 — $1,245,000$1,245,000HouseEst. $7,030/mo4 Beds3 Baths2,040 Sq. Ft.0.53 AcresBuilt in 1974426 Andria DriveStateline, NV, 89449Kingsbury Acres
PENDINGView 305 Olympic Court, Unit # C, Stateline, NV, 89449 — $550,000$550,000TownhouseEst. $3,106/mo2 Beds2 Baths1,007 Sq. Ft.Built in 1974305 Olympic Court, Unit # CStateline, NV, 89449Tahoe Village
NEWPENDINGView 121 Holly Lane, Unit # A, Stateline, NV, 89449 — $1,800,000$1,800,000TownhouseEst. $10,164/mo3 Beds4.5 Baths2,500 Sq. Ft.0.02 AcresBuilt in 1979121 Holly Lane, Unit # AStateline, NV, 89449Lake Village
What Tiers of Lake Tahoe Cabins Are Available?
According to NNRMLS and the Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS (May–June 2026), Nevada-side Lake Tahoe cabins fall into five price tiers — from sub-$750K vintage A-frames near Kingsbury and Stateline up to $8M+ lakefront estates in Glenbrook and Crystal Bay — with the median running about $1.5M–$2.5M in Incline Village and Crystal Bay.
Vintage Starter Cabin
Typical Areas: Kingsbury, Stateline backstreets, Zephyr Heights edges
Specs: 1–2 BR, 800–1,200 sqft, original era, often needing remodel
View →Mid-Range A-Frame & Chalet
Typical Areas: Zephyr Cove, Glenbrook (non-lakeview), Crystal Bay edges
Specs: 2–3 BR, 1,200–2,000 sqft, partial remodels, A-frames and chalets
View →Mountain-Modern Rebuild
Typical Areas: Incline Village (non-lakeview), Crystal Bay, upper Zephyr Cove
Specs: 3–4 BR, 2,000–3,200 sqft, full studs-out rebuilds, modern systems
View →Lakeview Cabin
Typical Areas: Incline lakeview, Crystal Bay bench, Glenbrook upper
Specs: 4–5 BR, 3,000–4,500 sqft, walls of glass, sunset and lake views
View →Lakefront Estate
Typical Areas: Glenbrook lakefront, Crystal Bay lakefront, Incline lakefront strip
Specs: 5+ BR, 4,500+ sqft, private pier or buoy rights, irreplaceable
View →Tier price bands reflect active Nevada-side cabin listings via NNRMLS and RSAR, May–June 2026.
Why Buy Cabins for Sale — Nevada Side in Lake Tahoe?
Buyers choose the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe for three reasons. According to California Franchise Tax Board rate tables, California taxes income up to 13.3% while Nevada levies none — the decisive holding-cost edge — plus IVGID beach-and-ski privileges unique to Incline Village and Crystal Bay, and permanently capped construction in a basin that is roughly 90% protected national forest.
- Nevada-side Tahoe carries zero state income tax — a decisive holding-cost advantage over California-side cabins for second-home and remote-work buyers.
- Incline Village and Crystal Bay owners access private beaches, the Burnt Cedar pool, and Diamond Peak ski area through IVGID — perks no California Tahoe town offers.
- Cabin inventory ranges from vintage A-frames near Kingsbury and Stateline to mountain-modern rebuilds above $3 million in lakeview Incline Village.
- The Tahoe Basin is roughly 90% protected national forest, so new construction is permanently capped — existing cabins appreciate on genuine scarcity.
Why Does the Nevada Side Beat the California Side for Tahoe Cabins?
Nevada Wins 6 of 9 Categories
How Lake Tahoe cabins compare across taxes, inventory, and lifestyle
The Nevada side wins 6 of 9 cabin-buying categories. According to Nevada Revised Statutes 361.4723, owner-occupied property-tax growth is capped at 3% a year, and Nevada levies no state income tax — the decisive holding-cost edge over a California-side cabin, alongside IVGID beach access, faster sales, and stronger year-over-year appreciation.
| Category | Nevada side | California side | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| State Income Tax | 0% | 13.3% (CA FTB) | Nevada |
| Property Tax Cap | 3% (NRS 361) | 2% (Prop 13) | Nevada |
| Median Price | $1.5M–$2.5M | $600K–$750K | California |
| Ski Proximity | 3 close resorts | 11 resorts | California |
| STR Rules | County permits | Permit caps | Nevada |
| Beach Access | IVGID private | Public state parks | Nevada |
| TRPA Jurisdiction | Same agency | Same TRPA | Tie |
| Inventory | 26 sales/mo | 34 sales/mo | California |
| Days on Market | 75–130 | 100–110 | Nevada |
| YoY Appreciation | +14% | -2% | Nevada |
Market figures (days on market, appreciation, inventory) from NNRMLS and RSAR, May–June 2026; tax figures from NRS 361 and the California Franchise Tax Board.
Call for a Lake Tahoe Cabin Expert — (775) 277-2120Where Else Can You Browse Lake Tahoe Listings?
Browse Nevada-side Lake Tahoe listings three ways — by neighborhood (Incline Village, Crystal Bay, Zephyr Cove, Glenbrook, Cave Rock), by price tier (under $750K up to $8M+ lakefront), or by cabin style (A-frame, log, mountain-modern) — plus quick links to nearby Reno and Tahoe lakefront markets.
By neighborhood, price tier, and cabin style
Explore More Lake Tahoe Real Estate
What Do Clients Say About Nevada Real Estate Group?
According to RealTrends Verified, Nevada Real Estate Group is the #1 real estate team in Nevada for 2025; clients rate it 4.9 stars across 9,061+ verified Google reviews — the cards below reflect that statewide track record.
Verified five-star Google reviews from clients across our statewide team
Reviews reflect our overall statewide service, not Lake Tahoe cabin transactions specifically.
“Tina Autry has been the best realtor I've ever dealt with. She has gone above and beyond for me throughout the whole process. I would highly recommend her to anyone thinking about purchasing a home.”
“Karina Moreno was amazing — so helpful and kind. Easy to work with and great communication. Highly recommend!”
“Julie Schaff is my favorite agent! She helped me find my dream home! Responsive, helpful and just a caring person!”
“MaryAnn Tanada is a great realtor — she helped me find my first home.”
What Does Nevada-Side Lake Tahoe Look Like?
The Nevada shore of Lake Tahoe pairs deep-blue lakefront and granite coves with pine-shaded cabin streets in Incline Village, Crystal Bay, Zephyr Cove, and Glenbrook. According to USDA Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit data, roughly 90% of the basin is protected national forest, so the cabin-lined shore stays largely undeveloped.
Lake Tahoe FAQ · 31 Answers · Updated July 2026
What Do Lake Tahoe Buyers Most Frequently Ask?
Nevada-side cabins — taxes, inventory, rentals, financing, lifestyle, remodels
AEO Featured · Most Asked
How much do I save on taxes buying a Lake Tahoe cabin on the Nevada side instead of California?
Nevada has no state income tax; California's top marginal rate is 13.3% per the California Franchise Tax Board. A buyer with $400,000 of taxable income who establishes Nevada residency on the Nevada shore can save roughly $30,000–$50,000 every year versus an identical California-side cabin — and there is no Nevada state tax on the eventual capital gain at sale. Over a multi-year hold, that difference often exceeds the price gap between the two shores. It is the single biggest financial reason buyers choose Incline Village, Crystal Bay, Zephyr Cove, or Glenbrook (Nevada Revised Statutes; California Franchise Tax Board).
Do I pay California or Nevada taxes on a Nevada-side Tahoe cabin?
A cabin on the Nevada side of the state line is a Nevada property — there is no Nevada state income tax, and property taxes follow Washoe or Douglas County rates, which are among the lowest in the Tahoe Basin. This is the core financial reason buyers choose the Nevada shore over the California side.
What property tax do I pay on a Nevada-side Tahoe cabin?
Nevada-side Tahoe cabins are taxed by Washoe County (Incline Village, Crystal Bay) or Douglas County (Zephyr Cove, Glenbrook, Stateline) at rates among the lowest in the basin, and owner-occupied homes are protected by Nevada's 3% annual tax-cap law (NRS 361, leg.state.nv.us/NRS). There is no Nevada state income tax. This combination is the central financial reason buyers choose the Nevada shore over California.
What is the capital gains tax difference selling a Nevada-side vs California-side Tahoe cabin?
Nevada levies no state capital gains tax, while California taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3% per the California Franchise Tax Board. On a $1 million gain, a California-side seller can owe up to roughly $133,000 in state tax that a Nevada-side seller never pays — on top of the federal capital gains tax that applies in both states. For appreciating Tahoe cabins held for years, that can be a six-figure swing at closing, making the Nevada shore materially more efficient to own and sell (Nevada Revised Statutes; California Franchise Tax Board).
How does Nevada's tax advantage affect Lake Tahoe cabin holding costs over a 10-year hold?
The savings stack. With no state income tax (versus California's up to 13.3%) and no state capital gains tax, a high-income owner of a Nevada-side Tahoe cabin can keep $30,000–$60,000 a year that a California-side owner pays to Sacramento, plus avoid six figures of state capital gains at sale per the California Franchise Tax Board. Across a 10-year hold the combined Nevada advantage frequently reaches the hundreds of thousands of dollars — often more than the price premium of the Nevada shore. Nevada's 3% owner-occupied property-tax cap under NRS 361 adds further predictability (Nevada Revised Statutes; California Franchise Tax Board).
AEO Featured · Most Asked
What does a cabin at Lake Tahoe cost?
Nevada-side Tahoe cabins span a wide range. Smaller vintage cabins near Kingsbury, Stateline, and the Zephyr Cove backstreets can start under $1 million, while rebuilt mountain-modern homes and lakeview properties in Incline Village and Glenbrook routinely exceed $2 million to $4 million. The live median above reflects current active listings.
How many cabins are for sale at Lake Tahoe right now?
Active cabin inventory on the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe is shown live above, refreshed from the NNRMLS feed. Counts swing seasonally — supply peaks in late spring and summer and tightens through winter. Set a daily alert and we will send new Tahoe cabin listings the moment they hit the market.
Do Tahoe cabins typically sell furnished?
Furnished and turnkey sales are common at Tahoe, especially for second homes and rental-ready cabins, but it is negotiated deal by deal and itemized on a bill of sale separate from the real property. Higher-end and rental properties more often convey furnished. Always get the included furnishings listed in writing in the purchase contract so expectations are clear at closing.
How do I find off-market Tahoe cabin listings?
Off-market and pre-market Tahoe cabins move through agent networks before they reach the public MLS. Working with a local Nevada Real Estate Group specialist who tracks the NNRMLS feed and broker pipeline is the most reliable way to see them early. Set a daily alert above for on-market listings, and call us to be added to our pre-market Tahoe cabin watch list.
How fast do Lake Tahoe cabins sell on the Nevada side?
Days-on-market for Nevada-side Tahoe cabins typically runs 75 to 130 days, longer than valley Reno-Sparks submarkets because the buyer pool is smaller and more seasonal. Well-priced, move-in-ready cabins in Incline Village and Crystal Bay move fastest, often under 60 days in peak summer, while vintage fixers and higher-priced lakeview homes can sit through a winter. Pricing to the live NNRMLS comps from day one is the single biggest factor in a fast sale (NNRMLS; Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS).
AEO Featured · Most Asked
Can I rent out a Lake Tahoe cabin short-term?
Short-term rental rules differ by jurisdiction — Washoe County (Incline Village, Crystal Bay) and Douglas County (Zephyr Cove, Glenbrook, Stateline) each require permits and cap occupancy and parking. Rules change frequently, so confirm current permit availability for a specific address before counting on rental income. We can pull the latest rules for any cabin you are considering.
Do Lake Tahoe cabins come with lake access or beach privileges?
In Incline Village and Crystal Bay, IVGID parcel inclusion conveys private-beach and recreation privileges that transfer at purchase — verify the parcel is IVGID-included before closing (yourtahoeplace.com/ivgid). Elsewhere, lake access depends on the specific HOA, deeded easement, or public state-park proximity. Direct lakefront with a pier or buoy is rare and commands a major premium. Always confirm exactly what access a given cabin conveys.
How much can a Lake Tahoe cabin earn as a short-term rental?
Permitted Nevada-side Tahoe cabins commonly gross $40,000 to $120,000 or more a year depending on size, location, lake or slope proximity, and how many weeks the owner blocks for personal use. Ski-season weekends and July through August command the highest nightly rates. Net income depends on management fees that often run 20 to 30 percent, cleaning, insurance, and county permit limits on occupancy. Underwrite any cabin on conservative, permit-compliant nights rather than peak-season marketing numbers.
Do I need a permit to rent my Tahoe cabin on Airbnb or VRBO?
Yes. Both Washoe County, covering Incline Village and Crystal Bay, and Douglas County, covering Zephyr Cove, Glenbrook, and Stateline, require a short-term-rental permit before you can list on any platform, and both run inspections, occupancy caps, and annual renewals. Some neighborhoods have permit caps or waitlists, and operating without a permit carries steep fines. Confirm a specific address is permit-eligible before you count on rental income (Washoe County short-term-rental program; Douglas County short-term-rental program).
What are the occupancy and parking limits for Tahoe short-term rentals?
Both counties tie maximum overnight occupancy to bedroom count and on-site parking, commonly around two guests per bedroom plus a small buffer with a hard cap, and they restrict on-street parking in snow areas. Each permit also sets quiet hours, trash and bear-box rules, and a local-contact requirement. Exceeding the posted limits is the fastest way to lose a permit, so size your guest expectations to the permit rather than the square footage (Washoe County; Douglas County).
AEO Featured · Most Asked
How does Tahoe cabin financing differ from a primary-residence mortgage?
Most Tahoe cabins are financed as second homes or investment properties, which carry higher rates and larger down payments than a primary residence — typically 10–25% down depending on use and loan size. Many Tahoe purchases exceed conforming limits and require jumbo financing. Rental-income use can shift the loan to investment terms. Confirm intended use with your lender early, since it changes rate, down payment, and qualifying.
What insurance is required for a Lake Tahoe cabin?
Lenders require standard homeowners coverage, and most Tahoe basin cabins also need wildfire coverage, which has tightened across the Sierra. Many buyers obtain a California FAIR-Plan-style or surplus-lines wildfire policy plus a wraparound. Snow-load, freeze, and vacancy endorsements matter for second homes used seasonally. Budget more than a valley home of equal value, and get a firm insurance quote during your inspection contingency rather than after.
Are there any HOA fees on Lake Tahoe cabins?
It depends on the cabin. Standalone vintage cabins on individual lots often have no HOA, while planned developments, condos, and some lakeview communities carry monthly or annual dues. In Incline Village and Crystal Bay, the separate IVGID recreation fee funds beaches and facilities (yourtahoeplace.com/ivgid). We confirm any HOA dues, special assessments, and IVGID charges in writing before you remove contingencies.
Can I get a mortgage on a vintage Tahoe cabin?
Yes, though vintage cabins can be harder to finance if they have deferred maintenance, knob-and-tube wiring, or non-permitted additions that affect an appraisal. Conventional second-home and jumbo loans are common at Tahoe price points. A pre-purchase appraisal review and a lender experienced with mountain and second-home properties prevent surprises. We can introduce cabin-experienced Nevada lenders before you write an offer.
Are there cabin-friendly lenders in Nevada?
Yes — Nevada lenders who routinely close Tahoe second-home and jumbo loans understand mountain appraisals, wildfire-insurance conditions, and seasonal-use underwriting better than a general retail lender. Working with one reduces appraisal and condition surprises on older cabins. We maintain introductions to vetted Nevada cabin-experienced lenders and can connect you before you tour. Verify any lender against the Nevada license registry where applicable.
How long does a typical Tahoe cabin closing take?
A financed Tahoe cabin purchase typically closes in 30–45 days, similar to other Nevada transactions, though wildfire-insurance binding and mountain appraisal scheduling can add time in peak season. Cash purchases can close in 10–21 days. Building in time for a thorough inspection — including roof, septic, and any TRPA coverage questions — protects you on older cabins. We coordinate the timeline so contingencies and funding line up.
AEO Featured · Most Asked
Which Nevada areas of Lake Tahoe have the most cabins?
Incline Village and Crystal Bay anchor the north shore and carry the deepest cabin inventory, followed by the east-shore Zephyr Cove and Glenbrook corridor and the Stateline area near Kingsbury Grade. Each blends original-era cabins with extensively remodeled and rebuilt homes.
Are Lake Tahoe cabins a good investment?
Tahoe cabins combine lifestyle use with strong long-term appreciation, driven by capped new construction in a protected basin and steady demand from California and remote-work buyers. Many owners offset carrying costs with seasonal rental income, subject to local permit rules. Nevada-side ownership also avoids California state income tax.
What's the difference between Incline Village and Crystal Bay cabins?
Both sit on the Nevada north shore and share IVGID privileges — private beaches, Burnt Cedar pool, and Diamond Peak ski access (per IVGID, yourtahoeplace.com). Incline Village is larger with deeper inventory, more services, and a wider price range. Crystal Bay is smaller, quieter, and skews toward higher-end lakeview and lakefront parcels on the California-Nevada line. Both are Washoe County for tax and short-term-rental purposes.
What is there to do year-round on the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe?
The Nevada shore pairs summer lake life with winter skiing. Warm months bring boating, paddleboarding, and the private IVGID beaches in Incline Village; winter delivers Diamond Peak and nearby Mt. Rose skiing, with Palisades and Northstar a short drive away. Year-round you have championship golf, the Flume and Tahoe Rim trails, and the Stateline casinos and dining minutes from Zephyr Cove. It is one of the few places you can ski and boat in the same week (yourtahoeplace.com).
How far is the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe from Reno-Tahoe International Airport?
Incline Village and Crystal Bay sit roughly 35 to 45 minutes from Reno-Tahoe International Airport over the Mt. Rose Highway, the fastest major-airport access of any Tahoe shore. Zephyr Cove, Glenbrook, and Stateline run about 60 to 75 minutes by way of Carson City. That proximity is a major draw for second-home owners and remote workers who fly in and out, and it shortens the trip for guests when you rent the cabin seasonally.
AEO Featured · Most Asked
What permits do I need to remodel a Tahoe cabin?
Remodels, additions, and rebuilds in the basin require Tahoe Regional Planning Agency approval in addition to county building permits, because TRPA caps land coverage and regulates shoreline and tree work (trpa.gov). Coverage is a fixed, transferable allocation — you cannot simply add hard surface. Before buying a cabin you intend to expand, verify existing coverage and buildable rights with TRPA so your plans are actually permittable.
How much does it cost to remodel a Lake Tahoe cabin?
Tahoe cabin remodels run higher per square foot than valley projects, commonly $400 to $800 or more for full studs-out work, because of the short building season, snow-load engineering, defensible-space requirements, and hauling materials up the grade. A kitchen-and-bath refresh might land in the tens of thousands, while a full mountain-modern rebuild on a lakeview lot can exceed $1 million. TRPA coverage limits and county permit timelines add soft costs, so budget contingency and time (TRPA).
Can I tear down and rebuild a cabin at Lake Tahoe?
Often yes, but a rebuild is governed by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency in addition to county permits. TRPA caps how much hard coverage, meaning building footprint, driveways, and decks, a parcel may have, and you generally cannot expand beyond the existing legal coverage without acquiring transferable development rights. Many buyers purchase a tired cabin specifically for its land and coverage, then rebuild within those limits. Verify a parcel's existing coverage and rebuild rights with TRPA before you buy (trpa.gov).
What is TRPA land coverage and how does it limit additions to a Tahoe cabin?
Land coverage is the amount of a parcel that can sit under impervious surface, including roof, driveway, patio, and walkway, and the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency sets a fixed allowance per parcel to protect lake clarity. You cannot simply add a wing or pave a wider driveway; you either build within your existing coverage or buy additional coverage through a transferable development right. It is the single biggest constraint on expanding a Tahoe cabin, so confirm available coverage before planning any addition (trpa.gov).
Can I add a private pier, buoy, or dock to a Nevada-side Tahoe cabin?
Shoreline structures are tightly limited. New piers are rarely approved, and buoys require permits through the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and Nevada state lands, with a long waitlist and strict environmental review. Most lake access on the Nevada side comes from existing grandfathered piers, shared HOA facilities, or IVGID beaches rather than new construction. If pier or buoy rights matter to you, buy a cabin that already conveys them rather than counting on adding them later (trpa.gov).
How Do You Get New Cabins for Sale — Nevada Side Emailed Daily?
Set your alert in 30 seconds and we'll send matching Lake Tahoe listings the moment they hit the MLS — or call (775) 277-2120 to talk with a local specialist.
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