The Scottish government is consulting until 2 December 2019 on introducing a discretionary power for local authorities in Scotland to impose local tourist taxes.
The intention is to provide local authorities with a discretionary power to decide whether to impose a visitor levy in their areas. There will be no obligation for any local authority to implement a levy. The consultation document, published on 9 September, refers to such a tax variously as a ‘transient visitor levy‘, ‘visitor levy’, or ‘tourist tax’. The consultation seeks views on the choice of name.
A number of Scottish local authorities, seeing local pressures from growing tourist numbers, have called for the Scottish government to allow them to apply a ‘tourist tax’ where appropriate for local circumstances. This prompted opposition from Scotland’s tourism sector, concerned that such a levy could have negative impacts on the competitiveness of the wider tourism sector across Scotland. The current consultation follows a series of national discussion events held between November 2018 and January 2019, accompanied by a discussion document.
The consultation seeks views on the activity or activities to which a visitor levy should apply. These include:
The broad options for any charge are:
The document also discusses a number of exemptions.
The need to provide a long lead-in time and legislative procedure mean this power is not likely to be available to local authorities until the summer season of 2021 at the earliest. See bit.ly/2OvDhwE.
The Scottish government is consulting until 2 December 2019 on introducing a discretionary power for local authorities in Scotland to impose local tourist taxes.
The intention is to provide local authorities with a discretionary power to decide whether to impose a visitor levy in their areas. There will be no obligation for any local authority to implement a levy. The consultation document, published on 9 September, refers to such a tax variously as a ‘transient visitor levy‘, ‘visitor levy’, or ‘tourist tax’. The consultation seeks views on the choice of name.
A number of Scottish local authorities, seeing local pressures from growing tourist numbers, have called for the Scottish government to allow them to apply a ‘tourist tax’ where appropriate for local circumstances. This prompted opposition from Scotland’s tourism sector, concerned that such a levy could have negative impacts on the competitiveness of the wider tourism sector across Scotland. The current consultation follows a series of national discussion events held between November 2018 and January 2019, accompanied by a discussion document.
The consultation seeks views on the activity or activities to which a visitor levy should apply. These include:
The broad options for any charge are:
The document also discusses a number of exemptions.
The need to provide a long lead-in time and legislative procedure mean this power is not likely to be available to local authorities until the summer season of 2021 at the earliest. See bit.ly/2OvDhwE.