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Popular Canary Island resort to introduce first-of-its-kind tourist tax

Simon Calder’s Travel

A town in Gran Canaria has announced they are introducing a tourist tax for visitors staying in the area, with the profits being reinvested into the local tourism industry and infrastructure.

Authorities in Mogán, a town 93 kilometres outside the capital, Las Palmas, and one of the best beach resorts across the Canary Islands, said on Thursday they plan to approve the tax in a plenary session on 12 December.

The fee will be set at €0.15 per person per day for those staying at a tourist establishment. Mogán City Council said the profits will be used exclusively to finance activities, services or infrastructure in the popular tourist area, as well as promote tourism in the municipality.

However, the €0.15 may not be set in stone, as the rate could fluctuate annually, depending on the costs derived from tourist activity foreseen in the council’s budget.

Onalia Bueno, the mayor of Mogán, said that the tax policy will be brought to the plenary session next week, but will be enacted sometime in January 2025.

The council said it will become the first tax in Spain at a municipal level. At present, autonomous tourist taxes have been applied in the Balearic Islands and Catalonia for overnight stays.

The tax will extend to those staying in tourist accommodation within the municipality, such as hotel complexes and holiday homes. However, it will be the owners of these properties that must pay the tax to the Mogán Town Hall for six-month periods.

The area is well known for its colourful buildings

The area is well known for its colourful buildings (Getty Images)

This is due to local councils not having the power to impose overnight stay taxes, so it will be imposed as a charge for local services instead.

The level of the tax arose from a study that looked at which services and activities had been underfunded and affected by the amounts of tourism the area received, which amounted to over €2.7m (£2.2m).

The tax amount was then calculated by dividing this number by how much was being generated by tourists visiting the area, and setting the price according to roughly how much each person was costing the area per day.

Bueno said in a press conference last week that this rate is born from the “disgust of having to bear the economic overexertion” that the local administration has to make “to maintain services, public spaces and tourist…

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