Edinburgh to tax tourists for overnight stays

Edinburgh to tax tourists for overnight stays

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daqinggregg

Original Poster:

3,602 posts

138 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
“Edinburgh to tax tourists for overnight stays” CNN

Local politicians in Edinburgh have approved a tourist tax for visitors staying overnight the Scottish capital, introducing the first charge of its kind in the United Kingdom.

From mid-2026, visitors staying in certain types of accommodation, such a hotel, bed and breakfast, hostel, self-catering apartment or guest house, will be charged a fee of 5% of their accommodation cost per night. The charge is capped at five consecutive nights, according to the local authority.

Accommodation providers will be responsible for collecting the fee. The council expects the new fee to raise £45-50 million ($56-62 million) a year by 2028 or 2029. lf of the authority.

I doubt 5% will make a difference to visitor numbers, but as we know once councils /government identify a new revenue stream there’s no holding them back. Obviously, like other charges, it won’t be long before other councils jump on the bandwagon, how long before 5% becomes 10% and so on, milk that cow!

Time4another

315 posts

12 months

Saturday 25th January
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Happens all over Europe.

mac96

4,631 posts

152 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
No doubt will be a pain un the rear to administer, especially for small businesses.
And why are they calling a tax a 'fee'? Trying to imply you get something in return I suppose.

Getragdogleg

9,217 posts

192 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
Come here illegally and you stay for free and get private health care but live here and go to another town to visit and get stiffed with a charge/tax on top of the hotel bill.

Sounds like a great way for the government to grab more money to pay for the first lot I mentioned.


Catz

4,817 posts

220 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
They’re trying to bring this levy to the Highlands of Scotland too.
I like a self catering break in the Highlands but I already pay council tax there so why should I also have to pay a levy.

bad company

19,773 posts

275 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
Not a problem. There’s lots of other places to spend my £’s.

TownIdiot

2,142 posts

8 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
bad company said:
Not a problem. There’s lots of other places to spend my £’s.
Plenty of which charge a visitor tax.

OldGermanHeaps

4,329 posts

187 months

Saturday 25th January
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Had this in manchester recently. Was down there for work but got stung with a tourist tax on check in that wasnt explicitly itemised when booking the room.
The place was an absolute sthole. What tourist in their right mind would pay to visit cheetham fking hill?
Is manchester not in the united kingdom?
Mind you the part we were working in didnt look like it.


Edited by OldGermanHeaps on Saturday 25th January 14:24

Leicester Loyal

4,700 posts

131 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
Is there anything you don't get taxed for in the UK anymore?

Sheets Tabuer

19,812 posts

224 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
Leicester Loyal said:
Is there anything you don't get taxed for in the UK anymore?
Wouldn't mind a tax for the bus loads of walkers (sp?) that turn up and park in my village then proceed to walk over my lawn because the public footpath is overgrown.

bad company

19,773 posts

275 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
TownIdiot said:
bad company said:
Not a problem. There’s lots of other places to spend my £’s.
Plenty of which charge a visitor tax.
Plenty more that don’t.

yellowbentines

5,592 posts

216 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
I don't think it will make a blind bit of difference to visitor numbers.

Plenty other countries and cities charge tourist taxes and I've paid them - I didn't filter destination by those that don't tax. Some I didn't realise until I got there (Madeira last October)

It just becomes part of the total cost of visiting when you are looking at options, like sales tax and resort fees in the US.

I go through to Edinburgh from Glasgow a couple of times a year for overnight stays for concerts, I don't think it'll be the difference between me going or not going.

Saleen836

11,601 posts

218 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
Currently postponed on the south coast...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd1x9kyywelo

abzmike

9,612 posts

115 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
yellowbentines said:
I don't think it will make a blind bit of difference to visitor numbers.

Plenty other countries and cities charge tourist taxes and I've paid them - I didn't filter destination by those that don't tax. Some I didn't realise until I got there (Madeira last October)

It just becomes part of the total cost of visiting when you are looking at options, like sales tax and resort fees in the US.

I go through to Edinburgh from Glasgow a couple of times a year for overnight stays for concerts, I don't think it'll be the difference between me going or not going.
Exactly - Edinburgh hotel prices are already epically high, and highly variable, few are going to notice or be deterred.

daqinggregg

Original Poster:

3,602 posts

138 months

I agree 5% isn’t going to make little difference; however, councillors have already expressed the opinion that 5% is not enough, so we can be sure that will rise in the not too distant future.

Tourism tax is widespread in Europe, in some countries that has been the case for a long time, it’s just accepted as part of culture, it’s a levy, not new cash grab.

I understand some location are suffering from chronic over-tourism, taxes are being introduced in attempt to curb that. I am rather cynical of taxes being used to resolve the problem.

In Scotland, the constant use of taxes to supposedly alleviate problems, seems little more than a revenue generating exercise, London ULEZ I understand, Inverness ULEZ, is like having a no urinating section in a swimming pool.

A quick comparison of hotels, ‘Ibis’, reveals Edinburgh prices are slightly higher than Paris and significantly higher than Berlin, obviously that reflects the operating environment.

Once Edinburgh has introduced the tax, how long before other municipalities follow suit!

Alex Z

1,596 posts

85 months

Getragdogleg said:
Come here illegally and you stay for free and get private health care but live here and go to another town to visit and get stiffed with a charge/tax on top of the hotel bill.

Sounds like a great way for the government to grab more money to pay for the first lot I mentioned.
https://www.reuters.com/fact-check/asylum-seekers-not-getting-free-private-healthcare-contrary-online-claims-2024-12-13/

Getragdogleg

9,217 posts

192 months

Alex Z said:
Getragdogleg said:
Come here illegally and you stay for free and get private health care but live here and go to another town to visit and get stiffed with a charge/tax on top of the hotel bill.

Sounds like a great way for the government to grab more money to pay for the first lot I mentioned.
https://www.reuters.com/fact-check/asylum-seekers-not-getting-free-private-healthcare-contrary-online-claims-2024-12-13/
Perhaps I should have put priority health care then, when they don't receive private (which many have) they get seen quicker than UK citizens and bypass the waiting times.

Your link even says it's a public funding of private health care via the NHS. So yes, my point stands and this hotel levy/fee/tax is yet another way to extract money from us.

Don't argue with this or try to paint me as some kind of racist, I know it is happening and is an NHS policy.

NHS giving asylum seekers priority care to 'address inequalities' as waiting lists pile up - LBC https://search.app/EqGww6uEyd5nBrnm9








Edited by Getragdogleg on Sunday 26th January 08:19


Edited by Getragdogleg on Sunday 26th January 08:25

bad company

19,773 posts

275 months

In Cologne they charge tourists the tax but not anyone staying there on business.

Edited by bad company on Sunday 26th January 09:45

hiccy18

3,085 posts

76 months

In principle I don't object to a tourist tax being levied to pay for the infrastructure that tourists are using. In France all of the departments can charge tourist tax, and the money is to be used to fund improvements to encourgage tourism (and maintain them, I guess). Problems I see with Edinburgh are the money is likely to be used to "fill" existing local authority budget black holes, and the rate is going right in at the highest I've ever paid, I think, anywhere.

gotoPzero

18,492 posts

198 months

There are not many places I have been that don't charge tourist taxes these days.

So long as the money goes straight back into the tourist industry I have zero issues with paying such taxes.