This essay examines the current dispute between state and local governments in the U.S. and online travel companies (OTCs) over the appropriate hotel occupancy tax base for online hotel bookings. It addresses the question of what should be the appropriate tax base in designing hotel occupancy tax statutes. It argues that the appropriate tax base should be the full rental prices of the hotel rooms paid by consumers inclusive of online travel company markups and service fees and not the discounted net rates paid by the OTCs to their hotel suppliers.
Published: Mak, J. 2012. What Should Be the Appropriate Tax Base for OTCs’ Hotel Room Sales? Pages 775-786 Tax Analysts. Tax Analysts, Falls Church, Virginia.