Chattanooga Times Free Press

Local hosts cashing in on room rental fees

- BY JUDY WALTON STAFF WRITER

Chattanoog­ans and their neighbors are making a bundle on bed space.

In 2017, some 53,000 people visiting Chattanoog­a booked rooms through internet company Airbnb, earning local hosts some $5.2 million, the company said Thursday. That’s compared to 24,600 guests and $2.5 million in 2016.

Another 10,000 or so stayed in towns such as Lookout Mountain, Cleveland and Ooltewah, the company said. This year, Chattanoog­a is the No. 4 home-sharing market in Tennessee, behind Nashville, Memphis and Seviervill­e, Airbnb spokesman Benjamin Breit said in a news release.

“Nearly all of the cities in the Chattanoog­a region achieved over 100 percent year-over-year growth in guest arrivals,” Breit said in the release.

And that’s just one online company. VRBO, HouseTrip, FlipKey and other companies are out there, too.

This year, the city of Chattanoog­a took steps to rein in what some have called the “Wild West” of the

hospitalit­y industry, setting up a special district for short-term vacation rentals and a process for property owners to participat­e in.

The city council voted in June to enact the district plan, which would allow short-term rentals in an area bounded by Lookout Valley and Missionary Ridge and including a large part of the North Shore. It requires property owners in the district to get a city permit and to collect local hotel-motel taxes.

Actually getting procedures up and running is a work in progress.

City spokeswoma­n Marissa Bell said since the rules took effect Oct. 1 the city has received 54 permit applicatio­ns. Earlier this month, the Times Free Press reported the Chattanoog­a Airbnb Facebook page had 111 members.

That report related how the county is working to track down short-term rental hosts who aren’t collecting and remitting room taxes. The county charges a 4 percent room tax, as does Chattanoog­a, and there’s 9.25 percent sales tax tacked on.

County Trustee Bill Hullander said he wished Airbnb would collect those taxes up front, rather than the county having to rely on property owners.

Breit said Thursday the company is working with the trustee’s office to make that happen. He said Airbnb already has 350 tax agreements with local government­s in place.

“Can’t make any promises until the deal is done, but we are certainly cautiously optimistic,” Breit said.

Just last week, council members voted to hire San Francisco-based Host Compliance LLC to monitor and administer the fast-growing hospitalit­y sector in Chattanoog­a.

The one-year contract is for $40,000 a year, with four, one-year renewals available.

Host Compliance founder and CEO Ulrik Binzer said Thursday the company’s job will be to “help the city stay on top of this market” so providers comply with the city’s rules.

The vendor will set up an online permitting portal for people who want to get into short-term rentals, and operate a 24-hour hot line so the city can take action against complaints or nuisances, such as a loud party house, Binzer said.

Bell said since the ordinance went into effect, monitoring has “mostly been complaint-driven.”

Now, she said, Host Compliance will have a list of permit holders and will monitor more than 20 websites to find property owners who are operating without permits. Those people will have 30 days to get into compliance or face a citation, she said.

Binzer said the monitoring process uses proprietar­y algorithms to “make sure everyone plays by the rules.”

“We’ll let the city know who’s cheating,” he said.

Contact staff writer Judy Walton at jwalton@ timesfreep­ress.com or 423757-6416.

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