The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Governor rolls back short-term rental tax for some

- By Mike Catalini

TRENTON >> Property owners who rent their Jersey shore homes directly are no longer responsibl­e for the socalled Airbnb tax under a new law Gov. Phil Murphy signed Friday.

Murphy signed the bipartisan bill as the summer season heads into its final few weeks and after a push from rental property owners to undo the tax that they said threatened the New Jersey’s multi-billion-dollar shore tourism industry.

“Our shore economy adds tremendous vitality and dynamism to New Jersey,” Murphy, a Democrat, said in a statement. “Access to affordable rental properties for visitors and income on rentals for homeowners are the backbone of that economy.”

The new law means that shore homeowners who manage rentals themselves— through personal referrals, yard signs or newspaper ads, for example — are no longer responsibl­e for a tax of at least 11.625%.

That tax went into effect late last year as part of the budget Murphy and lawmakers enacted, but the tax will still apply to other socalled transient accommodat­ions managed through travel agencies or online marketplac­es, like Airbnb or VRBO.

The new law resulted in a sigh of relief among a coalition of rental property owners, including some from New York and Pennsylvan­ia, who said the tax was stifling business.

“By signing this bill into law the Governor is both proving New Jersey is a tourism friendly state and protecting the integrity of the business economy along the shore,” President of the NJ Shore Rentals Coalition Denise Payne in a statement.

Just how many people the new tax affected is unclear. Payne said previously that the coalition estimates that it could be as many as 6,000.

New Jersey’s tourism website estimates overall the shore saw 100 million visitors in 2017, and they accounted for about $43 billion in spending.

Murphy’s administra­tion previously defended the tax as a way to “level the playing field” among hotels, motels and accommodat­ions offered through online marketplac­es like Airbnb.

On Friday, the administra­tion said the new law “more closely mirrors the original intent, which was to create parity throughout the rental industry.”

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, a rental sign hangs outside of a realtor’s office in Ship Bottom, N.J. On Friday, Gov. Phil Murphy signed a bill that repeals an 11.6 percent tax on short term rentals.
JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, a rental sign hangs outside of a realtor’s office in Ship Bottom, N.J. On Friday, Gov. Phil Murphy signed a bill that repeals an 11.6 percent tax on short term rentals.

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