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Economic Development

Birmingham planning to press ahead with 2022 Games 'hotel tax'

City council hopes it can still convince the Government to allow a hotel levy to be put in place to raise £15m towards hosting the sporting spectacle

Birmingham City Council is hoping a new hotel tax will support hosting the 2022 Commonwealth Games

A plan to add additional charges to hotel rooms in Birmingham to help fund the city's hosting of the 2022 Commonwealth Games is still in the pipeline despite the Government expressing doubts about the idea.

Birmingham City Council is pushing ahead with its attempts to convince the Government to let it impose the so-called 'hotel tax' which would see £1 added to every hotel room booking per night between now and the games.

If the council is not allowed to introduce the new levy, it will have to find the entire £184.7 million it has promised to contribute towards the preparations for the games on its own.

Supporters of the hotel tax say it could raise an additional £15 million between now and the start of the sporting spectacle in July 2022 which is expected to cost £778 million in total.

A sticking point for the authority is the fact it cannot force anyone to pay the additional charge and would require legislation for it to be implemented.

 

Last year, it attempted to achieve this through an amendment to the Birmingham Commonwealth Games Bill, a set of laws introduced by the Government.

West Midlands-based members of the House of Lords sympathetic to the council tried to introduce amendments that would have allowed the additional charge to be imposed.