Japan proposes ‘departure tax’ on travellers by 2020
US$8.81 departure tax on both Japanese and foreign travellers as it seeks to capitalise on a tourism boom.
Tokyo: The Japan Tourism Agency is mooting a national departure tax of up to about US$8.81 (about F$18.12) on both Japanese and foreign travellers as it seeks to capitalise on a tourism boom.
In an interim proposal submitted to the government last Thursday, the agency is recommending that this tax be implemented by March 2020, ahead of the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games to be held in July the same year.
This levy would likely be written as a surcharge on the airfare, such that travellers need not pay an additional duty at the airport.
Japan is reportedly studying the approach by countries such
as Australia and South Korea, whose governments claw back the “departure tax” from the airlines.
The new duty - which some have coined the “sayonara tax” - would be used to boost tourism infrastructure nationwide, promote off-the-beaten-track destinations in rural Japan and launch global tourism campaigns.
Among the enhancements in store are more multilingual support and Wi-Fi hot spots for travellers, and faster immigration and customs clearance. The new tax would be levied on top of the airport “passenger service” charge that Japan’s major airports already impose and is included in airfares.
This fee - common to major airports around the world including Changi Airport - is typically used for the maintenance and security of an airport’s common areas, among other things.