Now our politician in the Reno area decided to help the hote...
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Now our politician in the Reno area decided to help the hotel lobbyist by asking us to pay a high permit price and other rule...
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Aloha!
Trying to set up our tax options on our listing, and I see that in some places AirBnB collects taxes and in other places it doesn't.
Do they collect in Hawaii (Big Island)?
If not, which kinds of tax do I need to collect and what percent? I've heard GET and TAT for a total of approx. 15%, but want to make sure that's correct.
Thank you in advance!
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@Joanne686 @Kimo19 The GET and TAT gross revenue is based on what the guest pays. Here is a full description. A definition of gross revenue and fees to include are in #4.
https://files.hawaii.gov/tax/legal/brochures/TAT_brochure.pdf
Please also keep in mind that the GET gross revenue will be a little more, as you have to include the GET tax itself in the revenue and pay tax on it (I know, mind-boggling). That’s why you should collect 4.167% tax from the guest for GET, instead of 4%.
Also, keep in mind that none of your expenses should be deducted from the revenue. So, even if you have to pay a housekeeper, you still include the housekeeper fee the guest paid in the revenue. GET and TAT taxes are simply the taxes that the GUEST is paying to rent the accommodation.
Also keep in mind that host/guest Airbnb management fees are not included in gross revenue, since you as the host never receive those fees.
Regarding your first question:
Hawaii is not listed in this article and your listing also shows Airbnb is not charging taxes (when simulating a booking).
I add the GET and TAT taxes to the guest charges. You can do this if you are using the Airbnb Professional Tools (a field is added for taxes). Airbnb does not collect or remit these taxes on its own.
I collect 14.25% for TAT and 4.166 for the GET (to account for the weird rule of having to pay taxes on the GET). I then pay the taxes to the State of Hawaii every month.
By the way, the GET and TAT taxes apply to cleaning fees, as well as the base room charges.
Thank you for the help! Curious why you collect 14.25 instead of 10.25 for the TAT, maybe I'm reading the wrong info elsewhere... When setting the option for tax on the listing, do you do it per booking, per guest, per night? Not sure what's best
Awesome, thank you so much for your help !
Aloha, I have a question on what the tax is based on. Is based on the gross amount paid by the guest (room charge and cleaning) or based on the GROSS revenue I receive as a host? Much aloha and thanks, Kimo
@Kimo19 It’s on the room charge and cleaning paid by the guest. The GET and TAT taxes are actually guest taxes; we are just passing them on to the government.
Under what conditions would a host not receive the total room charge and cleaning paid by the guest? I assume you know that if you pay a housekeeper, that is an expense - it is not subtracted from the gross revenue for accommodations sales tax purposes.
Hawaii is increasing the TAT an additional 3% as of 10/1/2021.
You do not have to add this on if the bookings were before Sept 15, 2021
On Maui the state collects and in effect for all income reported after 10/1/21, regardless of whether it is a prior booking. It’s all about when you recognize income.
That is contrary to what the law says. It specifically says it doesn't matter when they booked and paid.
@Nicki116 Actually, there is a written explanation in the MCTAT documents that if you did not inform the guest in writing that the guest is responsible for any tax increases occurring after booking, the guest does not have to pay the increase, and therefore your MCTAT payments to the government do not include taxes from those guests.
We have always had the statement that the guest is responsible for any tax increases in our rental agreement.
MCTAT is checked against HI TAT income amounts. I have no interest in reporting different amounts and being questioned.
@Nicki116 Ah, ok. I don’t have stipulated that the guest needs to pay more taxes, above and beyond what they’ve already paid, if taxes go up between booking and check-in. I don’t mind being questioned by the government about reporting different gross revenues for TAT and MCTAT, since this is Maui County’s rule to begin with, and I can easily show them both my spreadsheet showing each guest’s booking date, taxes paid, etc. and the county’s online document explaining these rules.
So, do you go after your guests for the extra taxes, or just eat them yourself?