Bangkok Post

New Airbnb law a double-edged sword

Overnight stays legal for 180 days per year

-

TOKYO: Rental platforms like Airbnb are hoping for a boost from a new law coming into force next month in Japan ahead of an expected surge in demand for the 2020 Olympics, but experts warn it could actually hamper business in the short-term.

Currently anyone renting out a room risks falling foul of the law but short-term rentals will be legalised on June 15, clearing up a legal grey area.

But the new law also introduces fresh restrictio­ns, dismaying many who rent out rooms to tourists via Airbnb or similar platforms.

Would-be renters will have to register their lodgings with the authoritie­s and the new law limits total overnight stays to 180 days per year.

The new legislatio­n allows local authoritie­s to impose their own restrictio­ns too.

The tourist-magnet of Kyoto, for example, has said it will only permit rentals in residentia­l areas between mid-January and mid-March, the low season for tourist arrivals.

Jake Wilczynski, Airbnb spokesman for Asia-Pacific, said the new laws are a “clear sign that Japan is buying in to the idea of short-term rentals for individual­s”.

But many have cancelled reservatio­ns or simply taken their lodgings off the platform.

“Under the new law, Airbnb hosts will not be able to accommodat­e guests as easily as before. I hope this doesn’t put the bar too high for us,” 41-year-old Nobuhide Kaneda, who rents out a room in Tokyo said.

On an Airbnb discussion forum, an Australian host identifyin­g herself as Narelle wrote: “I am... becoming frustrated that no one knows what is required”.

“I also feel the three-month timeframe to organise a notificati­on number is unrealisti­c.”

Airbnb does not say how many properties on its platform already comply with the new laws but does not deny there have been some teething problems.

Mr Wilczynski said the firm was “in the process of discussing the issue with the Japanese Tourism Agency”.

“We are waiting for instructio­ns,” said the spokesman for Airbnb, which has informed its members of the legal changes.

Despite the new restrictio­ns, there is a huge potential market for short-term rentals as the country gears up for the Rugby World Cup in 2019 and Tokyo 2020.

Airbnb rentals have boomed in recent years, driven by an increase in tourism and a surprising lack of hotel infrastruc­ture.

With around 60,000 listings, Airbnb dominates the Japanese vacation rental market, even though it lags far behind many countries in Europe — France, for example, has 450,000 listings.

And demand is poised to rise as Japan targets an influx of 40 million visitors in 2020 when it hosts the Summer Olympics — up from 29 million last year.

Yasuhiro Kamiyama, CEO of Hyakusenre­nma, a local firm that manages 2,000 private rentals, said the new law will begin to “normalise Japan’s Airbnb market”.

He hopes to have 30,000 rental properties on his books by 2020.

Mizuho, a research institute, said that “vacation rental services are unlikely to rapidly expand after (the law’s) introducti­on. But the potential needs are great among f oreign tourists, particular­ly from Asia”.

However, the loosening of the law will also open the door to fierce competitio­n.

E-commerce giant Rakuten is planning to launch a property rental site as soon as the law comes into effect and telecom group KDDI has also set up a reservatio­n platform.

Hotel chains will also be stepping up their game, building new sites to counter “the risk of a shortage” come 2020, according to a recent research note from Mizuho.

An additional problem faced by potential hosts is opposition from neighbours, who worry about noise or security.

According to Japanese media, there have been several cases of management companies or co-owners banning sub-lets in their buildings.

Soichi Taguchi, a Japanese tourism official, said the new laws were “urgently needed to ensure public health and prevent trouble”.

But Airbnb called such incidents “extremely rare”, and Hyakusenre­nma’s CEO said “all the problems have stemmed from illegal rentals because neighbours did not know who was operating them”.

In a bid to overcome such local difficulti­es, some platforms offer extra services to manage rentals, such as welcoming guests and showing them around the property.

Airbnb has forged a partnershi­p with a service provider which registers properties with local authoritie­s and arranges cleaning after the rental.

 ?? AFP ?? Airbnb user Max Ikeda, left, talking with rental house owner Nobuhide Kaneda, right, and his partner Hitomi Watanabe, centre, in Tokyo. Airbnb is hoping to receive a boost in business once a new law legalising short term rentals comes into effect on...
AFP Airbnb user Max Ikeda, left, talking with rental house owner Nobuhide Kaneda, right, and his partner Hitomi Watanabe, centre, in Tokyo. Airbnb is hoping to receive a boost in business once a new law legalising short term rentals comes into effect on...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand