Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com
and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565
Sadiq Khan has said he is “happy to look into” the possibility of a tourist tax in London’s hotels, following cross-party calls earlier this week for a small charge on visitors to the capital.
The mayor said his team would be examining the evidence from the various European cities which have charged a levy on hotel bedrooms for several years now, and would also be looking at Manchester and Liverpool, where similar charges have been introduced.
Existing levies vary depending on the city and quality of accommodation. Visitors to Barcelona, staying in a four-star hotel for example, pay a charge of €4.95 per night as part of their bill, and in Paris would pay a levy of €8.13 per night. Venice will go a step further next year by introducing a €5 charge for day-trippers to the city – part of their effort to combat cruise tourism.
Asked whether he would support a tourist tax in London, Mr Khan said: “I’m happy to look into where it’s worked, what the issues are in relation to that particular policy…
“We’ll be looking at what cities are doing not just across Europe, but in the UK as well.”
In England, no local authority has the power to directly impose a straightforward tourist tax, though Manchester and Liverpool city councils, among others, have introduced a form of tourism levy via a legal workaround.
In Manchester, it is known as the “City Visitor Charge” and participating hotels – which are those with a rateable value of £75,000 or more – are encouraged to itemise it on guests’ bills. A report from the BBC in April 2024 stated that the levy had raised £2.8m for the city in its first year.
Pressed on whether he liked the idea of a London tourist tax in principle, Mr Khan said: “Let’s wait and see what the evidence is. I’m somebody who believes in following the evidence.”
The idea was warmly discussed on Monday by local politicians at the Centre for London think tank’s annual conference.
Chris Hayward, the City of London’s policy chairman, told the conference it was something he and his colleagues were already “looking at” for the Square Mile.
Mr Hayward, who effectively serves as political leader of the City of London Corporation, said: “We’ve got increasing numbers of hotels in the Square Mile now, so we are doing the work at the moment.
“I like the principle. I think it’s a good idea, but I think how you operate it is really important.”
He stressed the need to ensure “it doesn’t have the opposite effect and drive those tourists and those people you want to stay in your hotels away”.
Claire Holland, chair of London Councils – the capital’s local government association – said boroughs were “all for exploring with the Government, and with the mayor, how there can be more fiscal devolution across London, including looking at how a tourism levy would work”.
She added: “We’re really keen to look at that… As a global city, it’s really hard for us to compete with New York and other places, when we don’t have the same powers [to raise revenues].”
Kim Taylor-Smith, the Conservative deputy leader of Kensington and Chelsea Council, said a tourist tax was a “no brainer” and he was “absolutely in favour”.
Caroline Russell, a Green member of the London Assembly, said the charge could be used to help fund more public toilets across the city.
Her Liberal Democrat colleague, assembly member Hina Bokhari, said she was also “very supportive” of the levy, and that she would like to see the revenue it raises go towards London’s struggling nightlife sector.
This post was originally published on here