Connect with us

World

Scots council leaders call on Holyrood to speed up introduction of ‘tourist tax’

Published

on

Scots council leaders call on Holyrood to speed up introduction of ‘tourist tax’

Council leaders are calling on Holyrood to accelerate plans to give them the power to introduce a charge on overnight stays.

MSPs will this week back legislation giving local authorities the ability to set a visitor levy for those spending the night in hotels and other forms of accommodation.




But councils said the waiting time before they can apply the charge is “disproportionate and excessive”. Local government leaders in Cosla have lobbied MSPs on the issue.

The Royal Mile is one of the most popular streets in Edinburgh all year round, but especially during the Fringe — when tourists can watch street performers and browse its many souvenir shops. While it has an average rating of 4.5 out of five based on 25,770 reviews, not all visitors are enamoured with the Royal Mile’s focus on tourism.

The reviewer said: “Royal Mile is terribly touristy. Even out of season it is difficult to navigate the street — with increasing intensity the closer you get to the castle.”(Image: LuismiX / Getty Images)

The final debate and vote on the Visitor Levy (Scotland) Bill takes place on Tuesday. Leaders of Edinburgh City Council have already said they want to be the first in Scotland to introduce the levy.

But Cosla said as it stands, no local authority will be able to apply a visitor levy before 2026. That is because councils will have to wait 18 months after consulting on plans for a levy before being able to introduce it.

In a briefing paper, Cosla said: “This is clearly both disproportionate and excessive.

“After years of successive cuts to areas such as infrastructure, culture and leisure, the services and facilities crucial to both our communities and local visitor economies require the additional revenue which would be reinvested from a visitor levy scheme now.”

Continue Reading