Toronto Star

Quebec, Airbnb reach lodging tax agreement

3.5-per-cent tax for stays under 31 days will go to province’s tourism offices

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL— Airbnb and the Quebec government announced an agreement Tuesday that will see the home-sharing platform begin collecting a lodging tax on short-term rentals in the province as of October.

In what Airbnb is calling a first in Canada, the service will automatica­lly collect and remit a 3.5-per-cent tax on bookings for stays of under 31 days.

Tourism Minister Julie Boulet said the new rules will deal with a rapidly expanding industry.

“The government has the obligation to adjust, to adapt to this new reality and bring about changes to attain two objectives: to have competitio­n that is fair and just for all partners and the second, to respect the laws that govern Quebec,” she told a news conference.

The amounts raised through the tax will be returned to the province’s 22 regional tourism offices.

Airbnb’s Alex Dagg said the agreement underlines just how the company and a province can work in tandem.

“As the first of its kind tax agreement in this country, this is a landmark announceme­nt and a defining moment for Airbnb, not just in Quebec, but in all of Canada,” said Dagg, Airbnb’s public policy manager for Canada.

The company said nearly one million people used the service in Quebec in the past year alone and it estimates the province would have recouped $3.7 million in 2016 had the tax been in place.

The province currently has 22,300 active Airbnb hosts, according to the company.

On average, they rent out a listing about 38 times year and collect about $2,600.

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