Edinburgh councillors back plans to introduce £2-a-night tourist tax

The city council will submit proposals to the Scottish Government to charge tourists £2 a night – and ask for assurances that the funding is additional to any budget cuts from Holyrood.

This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement.

Conservatives have blasted the “lack of detail” and labelled the scheme “a garden tax in shorts and t-shirts” following the problems the council faced implementing its new garden waste charge.

As part of budget negotiations with the Greens in Holyrood, the Scottish Government has indicated that councils will be given powers to bring in a tourist tax or transient visitor levy (TVL), which is widely used across mainland Europe.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Council leader Cllr Adam McVey assured councillors that “it will be additional to our resources as a city”.

Tourists on the Royal Mile. Picture: Ian RutherfordTourists on the Royal Mile. Picture: Ian Rutherford
Tourists on the Royal Mile. Picture: Ian Rutherford

He added: “Unless we find a sustainable way of financing the things we use as a city and keep the tourism going, we will start to see a threat and detriment to that experience. We are already seeing pavements congested and we need to find better ways to manage it all.

Read More
Derek Mackay happy to strike workplace parking tax deal – John McLellan

“It will be set locally, collected locally and spent locally. We will collect it for the benefit of our city as a whole.”

The Capital’s tourist tax proposes a flat £2 per night room charge, an exemption for camp sites and a cap of seven consecutive nights. The charge would apply to “all paid accommodation” across the Capital, including short term lets and hostels.

But Conservatives called for more information to be gathered before pressing ahead with plans for tourist tax plans.

Cllr John McLellan, who tabled the Conservative amendment, said: “There’s widespread concern the money will dissolve into the council funding pot or be clawed back by the Scottish Government.

“We are being asked to approve something that the only detail is the pound signs in the eyes of the administration.”

Fellow Conservative Cllr Joanna Mowat added that the Conservatives want “a costed plan”.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

She added: “The report asks us to set a fee of £2. We don’t know how much it’s going to cost to collect or how many people we will be collecting it from. We don’t know how much this will raise and what we can use it for.”

Green and Liberal Democrat councillors supported moving the plans forward, on the condition that any revenue gained is additional to funding passed on from the Scottish Government.

Green Cllr Claire Miller said: “We need to design a TVL that’s suitable for our city.

“We have to be really clear that these revenues raised are new tax money. We need to nail down exactly what it will be paying for.”

Liberal Democrat Cllr Kevin Lang added that any tourist tax or transient visitor levy will help “visitors of Edinburgh make a more appropriate contribution to the success of the city”.

Cllr Lang added that the Conservative position on the tourist tax is “utterly perplexing” and that the party is “totally out of touch with public opinion”.

Greens and Liberal Democrats backed the adminstration’s plans, subject to assurances that revenue raised will be additional, rather than the Scottish Government “lopping off more and more from the revenue grant”.

Conservative group chairman Cllr Jason Rust warned that the council must get the tourist tax right.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He said: “Under the proposals, a B&B in Colinton would be treated the same as the Balmoral.

“We don’t know what form the legislation will take. The last thing we need is another garden tax in shorts in t-shirts.”

Join our Facebook group Our Edinburgh to share images and news from and around the Capital