º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Overnight stay tax in Wales criticised by tourism body

The Wales Tourism Alliance has objected to the proposed new visitor levy in Wales which could see people paying between 75p and £1.25 per night to stay in holiday accommodation here

Councils in Wales will be able to introduce the overnight levy from 2027.(Image: Laura Clements)

"This is not a tourism tax, it will affect us all" - that is the warning of a group which represents tourism bodies in Wales. The Welsh Tourism Alliance (WTA) has said it is "disappointed" that the Welsh Government is pressing ahead with a policy it has admitted will result in job losses in Wales.

The Welsh Government has said all overnight visitors in Wales will have to pay between 75p to £1.25 a night as a visitor levy, but the change will not take effect until at least 2027. It has been dubbed a "tourism tax" but it goes further than that, the group representing tourism providers has said.

It will apply at one of two rates to anyone staying in Wales overnight, whether in an Airbnb, Vrbo, or short-term let, or hotel, hostel, or campsite. There will be two levels of charge – 75p per person per night for people staying in hostels and on campsite pitches and £1.25 per person per night for those staying in all other accommodation types. There are three exceptions.

Each of Wales' 22 councils will themselves decide whether to introduce such a tax at all. The earliest the charge will come into force is 2027 after a local authority has consulted its community. Councils will subsequently have discretion to change that amount though any such deviation would require ministerial approval and further consultation. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here.

The new law will also make a register of visitor accommodation in Wales a requirement. It will, for the first time, provide a register of the broad range of visitor accommodation available across the country. The register will be drawn up in 2026.

As part of its official response to the plans, the WTA has said: "The WTA has engaged with the Welsh Government since the Visitor Levy was proposed and we are disappointed that they are pursuing a proposal from which their own Economic Impact Assessment predicts net job losses."

The Welsh Government commissioned a socio-economic assessment about the potential impact of the levy. It looked at three scenarios relating to take up - a "weak, medium and strong behavioural" response. In one, it would see 100 extra jobs created, or, if there was a "strong" take up, losses of 390 full-time equivalent jobs. The intermediary scenario would see 140 full-time equivalent job losses.

That assessment reads: "A downturn in demand could, for example, lead through to employers reducing hours, recruitment, investment plans, salaries or, in the extreme, making redundancies. This may ultimately impact on employees. These results are inevitably uncertain."