NL

St. John's losing out on $250K in taxes due to rentals like Airbnb

City council is calling for the province to "modernize" short-term rental accommodations like Airbnb with a regulatory system so the city won't lose out on levy fees.

City joins growing list of voices calling for regulation of short-term rental market

The City of St. John's says it is losing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars due to unregistered Airbnb listings, many of which are in the historic downtown area. (Submitted by Trevor Blackler)

St. John's city council is calling for the province to "modernize" short-term rental accommodations like Airbnb with a regulatory system so the city won't lose out on levy fees.

In a release sent out Monday evening, the city said it is losing $250,000 annually because of unregistered rentals.

"Online platforms such as Airbnb are here to stay; they provide an important economic opportunity for property owners and an option for travellers," it said. "It is clear that a modern regulatory system is required."

All registered hotels and bed and breakfasts in the city must pay a levy to the city's tourism and marketing program — amounting to four per cent of the nightly fee for each room sold.

The city brings in around $3 million each year through the tourism marketing levy, which is used to "market the city as a provincial and national tourist destination," and to pay down the debt on the convention centre.

Hundreds of homes located in and around St. John's are available for rent on Airbnb. (Airbnb.com)

The city doesn't have jurisdiction to make any changes to the short-term rental system — that falls to the province — but council has decided to add the city to the growing list of groups asking for change.

Last week, the province's hospitality association asked the provincial government to crack down on Airbnb, saying the province could have raked in more than $1 million in taxes if it was regulated.

Bed and breakfast owners on the Avalon Peninsula spoke out last summer about their struggles with competing against homeowners renting rooms on Airbnb.

Airbnb itself has even called for government regulation, telling the federal Liberals: "We want to be regulated."

Quebec and British Columbia have struck deals to get tax revenues from bookings on Airbnb, along with several Canadian cities.

Quebec's deal netted the province about $2.8 million over the first six months of the tax agreement.