In West Virginia, the minimum number of residents required to incorporate depends on the physical size of the territory you are looking to incorporate. According to West Virginia Code §8-2-1, the requirements are as follows:
Population Requirements
Areas less than one square mile: Must have at least 100 inhabitants or freeholders.
Areas more than one square mile: Must have an average of at least 500 inhabitants or freeholders per square mile.
Classification of New Municipalities
Once incorporated, the "class" of the municipality is determined by the total population:
Class I City: More than 50,000 residents.
Class II City: More than 10,000 but not more than 50,000 residents.
Class III City: More than 2,000 but not more than 10,000 residents.
Class IV Town or Village: 2,000 residents or fewer.
Additional Legal Hurdles
Simply meeting the population minimum is only the first step. To successfully incorporate, proponents must also satisfy several other conditions:
The Petition: Must be signed by at least 30% of the freeholders (property owners) in the territory.
The "Urban" Rule: The area cannot already be within an existing municipality that is "urban in character."
Service Delivery: The proponents must prove to the county commission that the new municipality can provide essential services, such as police and fire protection, solid waste collection, and water/sewer services, starting on the date of incorporation.
The "Best Interest" Clause: A county commission can deny the incorporation if they determine it is not in the best interest of the county as a whole or if a nearby existing municipality could provide services more efficiently.
If the county commission finds the requirements are met, they will order a census and eventually a special election where the qualified voters in that territory must approve the incorporation.
If a territory in West Virginia successfully incorporates, the authority to collect the hotel/motel (occupancy) tax shifts from the county to the new municipality for all establishments within the new corporate limits.
Under West Virginia Code §7-18-1, the tax is a "privilege tax" that can be imposed by either a county or a municipality, but they cannot both tax the same room. Here is how incorporation specifically changes the landscape:
1. Jurisdiction Shift
Pre-incorporation: The county commission collects the tax from all hotels, motels, and short-term rentals (like Airbnbs) in the area.
Post-incorporation: Once the municipality is formed and passes its own hotel tax ordinance, the county loses its authority to collect the tax within those new city limits. The revenue now flows directly to the municipal treasury.
2. Tax Rates
Current Standards: Both counties and municipalities are generally authorized to charge up to 6%.
Recent Legislation: As of early 2026 (HB 4776), there have been legislative moves to increase this maximum to 8%.
The Benefit of Incorporation: A new municipality could theoretically set a different rate than the surrounding county (within the legal limit). If the county was only charging 3% and the new town needs revenue, the town council could vote to increase it to 6% or 8% to fund local services.
3. Allocation of Funds (The 50/50 Rule)
West Virginia law is very strict about how this money is spent (WV Code §7-18-14). Whether collected by a county or a municipality, the revenue must be split:
At least 50% must go to a Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) to promote tourism.
The remaining 50% can be used by the municipality for:
Public recreation projects (parks, trails).
Historic preservation.
Promoting the arts.
Operating a museum or cultural center.
General expenditures (only if certain tourism requirements are already met).
4. Administrative Impact
For hotel and short-term rental operators, the primary change is remittance.
Instead of sending tax payments to the County Sheriff or Treasurer, they would remit them to the Municipal Finance Officer or Recorder.
Under current 2026 regulations, "marketplace facilitators" (like Airbnb or Vrbo) are required to use geofencing to ensure the tax is automatically routed to the correct taxing authority (the new town vs. the county).
Summary Table
| Feature | County Jurisdiction | Municipal Jurisdiction |
| Collection Authority | Unincorporated areas only | Inside corporate limits only |
| Max Rate | 6% (or 8% per 2026 updates) | 6% (or 8% per 2026 updates) |
| Primary Beneficiary | County-wide CVB | Municipal or Regional CVB |
| Remittance | County Sheriff/Treasurer | Municipal Finance Office |
In short, incorporation creates a "revenue carve-out" where the money generated by local tourism stays directly under the control of the new town's government rather than being managed at the county level.



