x
By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience.
Graham Awards

TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

Move to regulate Airbnb and short lets opposed by pressure group

A move to regulate Airbnb and other short let platforms operating in Scotland has received a hostile welcome from a countryside group. 

Scottish Land & Estates says it is “perplexed” by a move from the Scottish Government to pursue a new licensing regime for short-term lets: this is likely to happen first in the Edinburgh area but is expected to be applied across Scotland in the near future.

SLE policy adviser Gavin Mowat says: “We absolutely agree that the safety of people using short-term lets is paramount and communities shouldn’t be forced apart by a lack of adequate long-term housing.

Advertisement

“We are, however, concerned that these proposals don’t target the problem areas, and instead will be applied nationwide, even in areas where short-term lets are essential for the local economy and provide much-needed tourism accommodation.

“After a truncated consultation process in the middle of a pandemic, it is extremely disappointing to see the Scottish Government push ahead with these regulations without taking into account the difficulties we and other organisations have raised.

“The total financial impact of Covid-19 restrictions to the self-catering sector alone is over £265m since September 2020. Tourism businesses across rural Scotland have struggled all year and many of them simply do not have the resources or reserves to survive over the winter. Now is not the time to be saddling them with unnecessary burdens.”

Mowat says SLE members, like many others across Scotland, have been hit by unprecedented levels of income lost due to the Covid-19 restrictions. 

 

“The government’s foremost priority should be to help these vital local businesses ride out and recover from difficulties rather than imposing nationwide regulation that is largely only relevant to tourist hotspots such as Edinburgh. This is primarily an urban issue but one where rural voices are not being listened to” he adds.

“The clear message from the consultation responses was that new regulation was going to create further pain in the industry. We join with many other organisations in asking the Scottish Government to postpone the implementation of licensing like they have done with the tourism levy.”

Want to comment on this story? Our focus is on providing a platform for you to share your insights and views and we welcome contributions.
If any post is considered to victimise, harass, degrade or intimidate an individual or group of individuals, then the post may be deleted and the individual immediately banned from posting in future.
Please help us by reporting comments you consider to be unduly offensive so we can review and take action if necessary. Thank you.

  • icon

    Airbnb needs properly monitored and its users properly taxed. It distorts both the prs and the hospitality industries with the current light touch and favourable tax policies. Many residential areas in Edinburgh have been blighted by airbnb party flats.

icon

Please login to comment

MovePal MovePal MovePal
sign up