Highland Chambers of Commerce unite to oppose tourist tax
The three chambers of commerce in the Highlands have joined forces to strongly oppose the introduction of a tourist tax in the region.
The chambers have argued that the tax would be an unwelcome additional levy on the hard-pressed industry.
Inverness, Caithness and Lochaber chambers, which together represent 820 companies, outlined their stance in a submission to Highland Council’s consultation on the issue which ends on Sunday.
The letter, signed by the chambers’ chief executives Stewart Nicol (Inverness), Trudy Morris (Caithness) and Frazer Coupland (Lochaber), will also be passed to the Scottish Government, which is taking submissions on the topic until 2 December.
The Government has committed to consult on, and introduce, legislation to give councils the power to apply the tax, also known as a Transient Visitor Levy. This will enable local authorities to introduce the levy if they consider it right in their local circumstances.
Highland Council said the levy is one option it is considering as a way of raising income to manage the impact of tourism and help it invest in the industry. It estimates a Highland Transient Visitor Levy could generate £5m–£10m each year.
In their submission, the chambers recognise the vital importance of tourism to the Highland economy and the significant role the region plays in ensuring Scotland is one of the top tourism destinations in the world.
They said that they appreciate the difficulty The Highland Council faces in responding to the infrastructure and service challenges and are committed to working in partnership with the local authority to respond to the situation.
However, the chambers reject the implementation of a ‘tourist tax’ as a mechanism to address the issue.
The submission states: “You will be aware that the tourism sector is already facing unprecedented challenges with recruitment and retaining of skilled staff. This has been a real challenge for many years and has been critically exacerbated by the prolonged and damaging uncertainty around Brexit.
“The sector has been under significant cost pressure in recent years, particularly around business rates. Regardless of how the levy is framed, this would act as a further unwelcome tax on this hard-pressed sector.”
The chief executives added that one of their fundamental concerns is that the levy will give out the wrong message to visitors.
“The addition of a tourism levy, no matter how nominal, to the cost of each person visiting the Highland Region will make a clear statement that this part of Scotland is more expensive to visit than elsewhere in the country.”
They also argued that business visitors will be liable to any additional daily charge, which would inevitably add to the cost of doing business in the Highlands.
The chambers’ submission raises concerns that a levy collected on overnight stays would exclude day visitors from contributing towards infrastructure and service challenges, as well as how funds from the tax would be distributed across the region.
Stewart Nicol said: “The three chambers are united in our opposition to this tax. Many of our members operate in the tourism sector and we feel it will be a further burden on visitors and discourage people from coming here.”