Tourist taxes by city: what you actually pay, and the catch
Tourist taxes have crept up fast, and they are rarely in the room price you booked. Some cities add a flat few euros a night, some take a percentage that balloons on a nice hotel, a couple bolt on extra fees, and a few charge nothing at all.
Here is the honest, city-by-city picture for 2026: how much, how it is charged, who is exempt, and the catch in each place. Every city links to its official source.
| City | What you pay | How much |
|---|---|---|
| Amsterdam Netherlands | 12.5% of the room price, per night | Steep |
| Paris France | Up to €15.93 per adult per night (with surcharges) | Steep |
| Venice Italy | City tax per night, plus a day-tripper access fee | Steep |
| Barcelona Spain | About €6 to €12 per person per night (from April 2026) | Steep |
| Rome Italy | €4 to €10 per person per night, by hotel class | Steep |
| New York City USA | About 14.75% plus a flat nightly fee | Steep |
| Las Vegas USA | About 13% room tax, plus resort fees | Steep |
| Florence Italy | €3.50 to €8 per person per night | Moderate |
| Lisbon Portugal | €4 per person per night (first 7 nights) | Moderate |
| Athens Greece | Seasonal climate fee, €0.50 to €15 per night | Moderate |
| Berlin Germany | 7.5% of the net room price | Moderate |
| Vienna Austria | 3.2% now, rising to 5% from 1 July 2026 | Moderate |
| Porto Portugal | €3 per person per night (age 13+) | Low |
| Prague Czech Republic | About CZK 50 (~€2) per person per night | Low |
| Budapest Hungary | 4% of the net room price | Low |
| Dubai United Arab Emirates | Tourism Dirham, about AED 7 to AED 20 per room per night | Low |
| Istanbul Turkey | 2% (temporarily 1% in 2026) on the room price | Low |
| Tokyo Japan | ¥100 to ¥200 per person per night | Low |
| Madrid Spain | No tourist tax | No tourist tax |
| London England | No tax yet; one is proposed, not in force | Coming / proposed |
| Dublin Ireland | No tax yet, one proposed (up to €5/night) | Coming / proposed |
| Milan Italy | A nightly tourist tax of €3 to €12 per person, set by hotel star rating. | Moderate |
| Naples Italy | Naples charges a nightly city tax per person. In mid-2026, most listed bands run from about €4 to €6, depending on the lodging type and category. | Moderate |
| Dubrovnik Croatia | Expect a small per-person, per-night tourist tax. Dubrovnik is usually higher from April through September and lower from October through March. | Low |
| Nice France | Nice Côte d'Azur charges a per-person, per-night taxe de séjour, with 2026 rates set by accommodation class. | Moderate |
| Reykjavik Iceland | Hotels and guesthouses charge ISK 800 per lodging tax unit per night. Campsites and motorhome pitches are ISK 400. | Low |
| Split Croatia | Croatia charges a local tourist tax per person, per night, usually collected by your accommodation. | Low |
| Utrecht Netherlands | Expect a 10% municipal tourist tax on the taxable room price per overnight stay in 2026. | Steep |
| Hamburg Germany | Hamburg charges a culture and tourism tax on paid overnight stays, calculated per overnight guest and day from the net accommodation price. | Low |
| Edinburgh Scotland | A 5% visitor levy starts for stays from 24 July 2026, charged on the first 5 nights of paid overnight accommodation. | Coming / proposed |
| Krakow Poland | Krakow does not currently charge a general city tourist tax on hotel nights. | No tourist tax |
| Munich Germany | Munich does not currently charge a nightly city tourist tax for visitors. | No tourist tax |
No tourist tax · Coming / proposed · Low · Moderate · Steep
Amsterdam Netherlands Steep
12.5% of the room price, per night
Amsterdam has the steepest city tax in Europe: 12.5% of the room price (before VAT), added every night, with no cap on the number of nights.
On a €250 room that is over €31 a night, and from 2026 the Dutch VAT on hotel stays jumped from 9% to 21%, so the combined tax bite is around a third of the bill.
The catch: Because it is a percentage, not a flat fee, it scales with how much you spend, so a pricey hotel is taxed hard. It also applies to short-stay rentals and to cruise passengers.
Source: City of Amsterdam (tourist tax)
Plan things to do in AmsterdamParis France Steep
Up to €15.93 per adult per night (with surcharges)
Paris raised its taxe de séjour for 2026. The all-in rate per adult per night runs from about €0.65 at a campsite and €1.95 at a hostel up to €3.25 (2-star), €5.53 (3-star), €8.45 (4-star), €11.70 (5-star) and €15.93 at a palace; unclassified places pay 5% of the room rate, capped at €15.93.
Those figures already include the stacked surcharges: Paris adds a 10% departmental tax, a 15% regional tax and a 200% Île-de-France transport surcharge on top of the base municipal rate, so the levy is far bigger than the headline figure.
The catch: It is per adult per night, with under-18s exempt. The surcharges that more than triple the base rate are easy to overlook when you compare hotels.
Source: Paris je t'aime (tourist tax)
Plan things to do in ParisVenice Italy Steep
City tax per night, plus a day-tripper access fee
Venice charges two separate things. The overnight city tax is €1 to €4.50 per person per night, capped at five nights and set by hotel category and season.
On top, the day-tripper access fee returns for 2026: €5 if you register at least four days ahead, €10 if you book late, to enter the historic centre between 08:30 and 16:00 on about 60 peak days from 3 April to 26 July (Fridays to Sundays plus some holiday stretches).
The catch: Overnight guests do not pay the day-tripper fee, but they still have to pre-register to get an exemption code. Children under 14 are exempt from the access fee.
Source: Venezia Unica (access fee)
Plan things to do in VeniceBarcelona Spain Steep
About €6 to €12 per person per night (from April 2026)
Barcelona stacks the Catalan regional tax plus a city surcharge. From 1 April 2026 that comes to about €6 a night for a youth hostel, €8.40 at a 4-star, €9.50 for a tourist apartment and up to €12 at a five-star hotel, per person.
The municipal surcharge is set to keep rising by about €1 a year through 2029, so it only goes up from here.
The catch: It is per person and capped at seven nights. Madrid, by contrast, has no tourist tax at all, so the two big Spanish cities are worlds apart on this.
Source: Catalan Tax Agency (IEET)
Plan things to do in BarcelonaRome Italy Steep
€4 to €10 per person per night, by hotel class
Rome's contributo di soggiorno scales with hotel class: about €4 at a 1-star up to €10 at five-star and luxury hotels, with most 4-star stays at €7.50, for up to 10 consecutive nights.
Children under 10 are exempt.
The catch: It is charged per person, so a family adds up fast, and it is usually collected at the hotel (often in cash at checkout) rather than baked into your booking price.
Source: Roma Capitale (contributo di soggiorno)
Plan things to do in RomeNew York City USA Steep
About 14.75% plus a flat nightly fee
New York City hotels carry one of the heaviest tax loads anywhere: roughly 14.75% in combined sales and hotel-occupancy taxes, plus about $3.50 per room per night in flat fees.
It is all added to the room rate, and often only fully visible at checkout.
The catch: On a $300 room that is around $48 a night in tax. Many hotels also tack on a 'destination' or facility fee, which is not a tax but stings just the same.
Source: NYC Dept. of Finance (hotel occupancy tax)
Plan things to do in New York CityLas Vegas USA Steep
About 13% room tax, plus resort fees
Las Vegas room tax runs about 13% to 13.38% (the Strip is at the top of that range), added to the nightly rate.
The bigger hit is the resort fee almost every Strip hotel charges, commonly $45 to $60 a night, which is not a tax but is effectively unavoidable.
The catch: The resort fee is the real catch: it is mandatory, charged per night, and usually left out of the headline room price you booked.
Source: City of Las Vegas (room tax)
Plan things to do in Las VegasFlorence Italy Moderate
€3.50 to €8 per person per night
Florence sets the rate by hotel category: about €3.50 a night at the cheapest places up to €8 at five-star hotels, with most mid-range stays around €6 per person per night.
It is capped at seven nights and under-12s pay nothing.
The catch: Like the rest of Italy it is per person and usually paid at the hotel, so a couple over a week pays roughly €80 on top of the room.
Source: Comune di Firenze (imposta di soggiorno)
Plan things to do in FlorenceLisbon Portugal Moderate
€4 per person per night (first 7 nights)
Lisbon's taxa turística is €4 per person per night for the first seven nights of your stay.
It applies from age 13; under-13s are exempt.
The catch: It is collected by the accommodation, often separately from your booking, so plan for €4 a head a night on top of the room.
Source: Lisboa (Taxa Municipal Turística)
Plan things to do in LisbonAthens Greece Moderate
Seasonal climate fee, €0.50 to €15 per night
Greece replaced its old hotel tax with a Climate Crisis Resilience Fee. It is seasonal and set by accommodation type, from as little as €0.50 a night off-season up to €15 a night at top hotels in summer.
The higher rates run April to October, and the same fee applies across Greece, including Santorini, Mykonos and the rest of the islands.
The catch: It is charged per room per night (not per person), and it is steepest in peak summer, exactly when most people travel to the islands.
Source: Greek tax authority (AADE)
Plan things to do in AthensBerlin Germany Moderate
7.5% of the net room price
Berlin's City Tax is 7.5% of the net room price (before VAT), for stays of up to 21 nights.
Since 2024 it applies to business trips too, not just leisure stays.
The catch: It is a percentage of the room, so it grows with the nightly rate rather than staying flat.
Source: Berlin.de (Übernachtungsteuer)
Plan things to do in BerlinVienna Austria Moderate
3.2% now, rising to 5% from 1 July 2026
Vienna's accommodation tax (Ortstaxe) is about 3.2% of the room price until 30 June 2026, then rises to 5% from 1 July 2026, and to 8% from 1 July 2027.
A few exemptions apply, so check the current rules when you book.
The catch: Because the increase lands mid-2026, the rate you pay depends on your dates; confirm the current figure at booking.
Source: City of Vienna (Ortstaxe)
Plan things to do in ViennaPorto Portugal Low
€3 per person per night (age 13+)
Porto charges €3 per person per night for guests aged 13 and over, capped at €21 per trip (seven nights).
Under-13s are free.
The catch: Cheaper than Lisbon's €4, but still per person, and paid at the property rather than included in the room rate.
Source: Câmara Municipal do Porto (TMT)
Plan things to do in PortoPrague Czech Republic Low
About CZK 50 (~€2) per person per night
Prague charges a flat fee of about CZK 50, roughly €2, per person per night, for stays of up to 60 nights.
Under-18s are exempt.
The catch: One of the cheaper city taxes in Europe, and a flat fee, so it does not balloon if you book a nicer hotel.
Source: Prague City Hall
Plan things to do in PragueBudapest Hungary Low
4% of the net room price
Budapest adds a tourist tax of 4% of the net room price per night.
Under-18s are exempt.
The catch: A percentage, so a higher room rate means a higher tax, but on typical Budapest prices it stays modest.
Source: BudapestInfo (official tourism)
Plan things to do in BudapestDubai United Arab Emirates Low
Tourism Dirham, about AED 7 to AED 20 per room per night
Dubai charges a Tourism Dirham per room per night, set by hotel class: roughly AED 7 to AED 20 (about €2 to €5), with five-star hotels at the top.
It is per room, not per person, and unchanged for 2026.
The catch: Hotels also add a 10% municipality fee plus service charges and VAT, so the Tourism Dirham is only one line of the total you see on a Dubai hotel bill.
Source: Visit Dubai (official)
Plan things to do in DubaiIstanbul Turkey Low
2% (temporarily 1% in 2026) on the room price
Turkey applies a 2% accommodation tax on the room price nationwide, Istanbul included, but it was temporarily cut to 1% from 1 May 2026 through 31 December 2026.
It shows up on your bill and applies to hotels and short-term rentals alike.
The catch: A small percentage, so it stays modest, but it is charged on the pre-VAT room price across the whole country.
Source: Turkish Revenue Administration
Plan things to do in IstanbulTokyo Japan Low
¥100 to ¥200 per person per night
Tokyo's accommodation tax is a flat ¥100 per person per night for rooms priced ¥10,000 to ¥14,999, and ¥200 for rooms of ¥15,000 and over; cheaper rooms pay nothing.
Tokyo plans to switch to a 3% percentage system in 2027.
The catch: Tiny by European standards. Separately, Japan charges a ¥1,000 international departure tax, which is usually built into your flight ticket.
Source: Tokyo Metropolitan Government (tax bureau)
Plan things to do in TokyoMadrid Spain No tourist tax
No tourist tax
Madrid has no general tourist tax. You pay your room plus Spain's VAT, and nothing extra per night.
There has been political talk of introducing one, but as of 2026 nothing is in force.
The catch: This makes Madrid noticeably cheaper than Barcelona for a like-for-like stay, since Barcelona adds roughly €10 a person a night.
Source: esMadrid (official tourism)
Plan things to do in MadridLondon England Coming / proposed
No tax yet; one is proposed, not in force
England has had no tourist tax, and there still is none in force. A Tourist Levy for London is proposed but not yet law, and the rate and timing are unsettled, with early talk of a few pounds per room per night.
It depends on new powers being granted, and several other UK cities are weighing similar overnight levies.
The catch: Nothing is collected yet, so treat any specific figure or start date as provisional and check the latest before you book.
Source: Greater London Authority
Plan things to do in LondonDublin Ireland Coming / proposed
No tax yet, one proposed (up to €5/night)
Dublin has no tourist tax in force, but the city council is actively weighing one, with proposals of up to €5 per night.
For now you pay nothing extra, but that may change.
The catch: Nothing is collected yet, and Irish hoteliers and the council are still arguing it out, so check nearer your trip.
Source: Dublin City Council
Plan things to do in DublinMilan Italy Moderate
A nightly tourist tax of €3 to €12 per person, set by hotel star rating.
Milan charges a tassa di soggiorno (tourist tax) per person per night, scaled by the hotel's star rating. Since the rates rose in April 2026 it runs roughly €3 at a 1-star up to €12 at a 5-star. It is paid at the property, separate from your room rate, and capped at a set number of nights.
Under-18s are exempt. As elsewhere in Italy, it is collected in cash or on card at the hotel rather than online when you book.
The catch: Charged per person per night and paid at the hotel, so it is not in your online room price; at a smart hotel it adds up.
Source: Comune di Milano: imposta di soggiorno
Plan things to do in MilanNaples Italy Moderate
Naples charges a nightly city tax per person. In mid-2026, most listed bands run from about €4 to €6, depending on the lodging type and category.
The Comune di Napoli table shows new 2026 rates, with a second rise from 1 May 2026. Four and five star hotels and short rentals sit at the top band, while lower hotel categories sit below that.
Treat the room rate and the local tax as separate costs. Exemptions, category rules, and stay limits can change the final bill, so check the city table and your booking confirmation before you go.
The catch: It is manageable for a night or two. On a longer stay, it becomes a real line item.
Source: Comune di Napoli: imposta di soggiorno
Plan things to do in NaplesDubrovnik Croatia Low
Expect a small per-person, per-night tourist tax. Dubrovnik is usually higher from April through September and lower from October through March.
Croatia charges tourist tax on overnight stays, and Dubrovnik is one of the places where I would assume it applies unless your booking plainly says it is included. Recent Dubrovnik figures are usually quoted at about €2.65 per adult per night from April to September and about €1.85 from October to March, but confirm with the accommodation because collection can vary.
Children under 12 are generally exempt under Croatian rules, while ages 12 to 18 usually pay a reduced rate. Private apartments may fold it into the stay price. Hotels sometimes collect it at check-in or check-out.
The catch: Ask whether it is included before arrival, especially in private rentals.
Source: Croatia e-Citizens: tourist tax
Plan things to do in DubrovnikNice France Moderate
Nice Côte d'Azur charges a per-person, per-night taxe de séjour, with 2026 rates set by accommodation class.
For 2026, the official Métropole Nice Côte d'Azur table runs from €0.27 per adult per night for the lowest campsite and marina categories to €6.43 for palaces. Rated hotels, aparthotels, furnished rentals, B&Bs, hostels, holiday villages, and campsites sit between those two ends, so most visitors see a small nightly add-on rather than one flat city fee.
Unclassified accommodation uses a percentage of the pre-tax nightly price per person, capped at the palace rate. Under-18s are exempt. Check the booking and invoice line item, because the tax may be collected separately and sites do not all show it with the same clarity.
The catch: It is not a reason to skip Nice, but it can sting on a long stay or a high-end room.
Source: Métropole Nice Côte d'Azur tourist tax portal
Plan things to do in NiceReykjavik Iceland Low
Hotels and guesthouses charge ISK 800 per lodging tax unit per night. Campsites and motorhome pitches are ISK 400.
Iceland has a national lodging tax, not a Reykjavik city tax. From 1 January 2025, the official rate is ISK 800 for each lodging tax unit per night at hotels, guesthouses, and similar licensed stays.
The amount is small beside normal Reykjavik room costs, but it can still show up as a separate line in the booking terms or at the property. Campsites, motorhome pitches, caravan sites, and domestic cruise stays use the lower ISK 400 rate.
The catch: It is per lodging tax unit, not per person, which matters if you are splitting one room.
Source: Skatturinn: lodging tax
Plan things to do in ReykjavikSplit Croatia Low
Croatia charges a local tourist tax per person, per night, usually collected by your accommodation.
For Split in 2026, expect a small nightly charge, not a nasty surprise. In ordinary accommodation the per-person rate is about €2.65 a night from April 1 to September 30 and €1.86 the rest of the year; campsites pay less (around €1.99 and €1.33). The local 2026 Split-Dalmatia County decision is the document to check if you want the exact figure for your accommodation type and dates.
Children under 12 are exempt under Croatian rules, and many 12 to 18 year olds pay a reduced rate. Hotels and apartments may include the tax in the room price or ask for it separately, so read the booking notes before you decide it is already paid.
The catch: If an apartment asks for the tax at check-in, that can be normal, but the host should still register the stay.
Source: Tourist Board of Split: 2026 tourist tax decision
Plan things to do in SplitUtrecht Netherlands Steep
Expect a 10% municipal tourist tax on the taxable room price per overnight stay in 2026.
Utrecht charges tourist tax on paid overnight stays by people who are not registered as city residents. The 2026 city ordinance sets the rate at 10% of the accommodation fee, with the tourist tax itself left out of that base.
This is not a token nightly charge. On a nicer central room it stings, and hotels often show it separately, so judge the final booking total rather than the first room rate you see.
The catch: If the rate matters to your budget, check the final booking page because VAT, service fees, and tourist tax may be split out.
Source: Gemeente Utrecht: tourist tax ordinance 2026
Plan things to do in UtrechtHamburg Germany Low
Hamburg charges a culture and tourism tax on paid overnight stays, calculated per overnight guest and day from the net accommodation price.
The tax is graduated by the net price per guest per night: nothing up to 10 euros, then 0.60 euro up to 25, 1.20 up to 50, 2.40 up to 100, 3.60 up to 150, 4.80 up to 200, and 1.20 euro more for each additional 50 euros above that. Cheaper rooms sit in the lower bands; pricier ones climb.
Accommodation providers are liable for the tax, but they may pass it on to guests. Breakfast and other add-on services are not part of the taxable accommodation price, and the tax does not have to be shown as a separate line on the invoice.
The catch: It is not a flat city tax, so the taxable amount depends on the per-person net overnight rate rather than simply the room or booking total.
Source: Hamburg tax authority: culture and tourism tax leaflet (PDF)
Plan things to do in HamburgEdinburgh Scotland Coming / proposed
A 5% visitor levy starts for stays from 24 July 2026, charged on the first 5 nights of paid overnight accommodation.
Edinburgh is moving from no city visitor levy to a percentage levy. It applies to the accommodation cost before VAT, not to extras such as meals, parking, drinks or transport.
For trips before 24 July 2026, the practical answer is still no city tourist tax. For later stays, check whether the booking was paid in full or in part before 1 October 2025, since the council lists an exemption for those bookings.
The catch: It is a percentage levy, so expensive August rooms will feel it more than cheap winter ones.
Source: City of Edinburgh Council: Visitor Levy
Plan things to do in EdinburghKrakow Poland No tourist tax
Krakow does not currently charge a general city tourist tax on hotel nights.
Polish rules still tie local and spa-style accommodation charges to specific legal conditions, and Krakow has been lobbying for a separate tourist tax rather than collecting one now.
Ignore private rental pages that imply a standard municipal tourist fee unless it is clearly part of that property's own terms. For a normal city hotel stay, there is no Krakow nightly city tax to add today.
The catch: A future tax is politically live, so check your booking confirmation for any property-level fees.
Source: City of Krakow: tourist tax update
Plan things to do in KrakowMunich Germany No tourist tax
Munich does not currently charge a nightly city tourist tax for visitors.
Munich's city council approved a 5% overnight tax in 2023, but Bavaria's state law blocked local overnight taxes before it could take effect. In 2026 the city said it was considering a constitutional complaint, so the rule is still politically active rather than settled forever.
Treat hotel totals as mostly VAT-inclusive German pricing, but still check the final booking screen for local charges, breakfast, and any property-specific fees. Recheck this before a future trip because the legal dispute could change the position.
The catch: If Munich later wins its tax case, hotel guide pages may lag behind the new rule.
Source: City of Munich: overnight tax update
Plan things to do in MunichTourist taxes: quick answers
Amsterdam, by a distance. Its city tax is 12.5% of the room price every night, with no cap, so a pricier hotel is taxed hard. Paris and Barcelona are next, both around or above €9 to €12 a night once their surcharges are counted.
Not historically, and still none in force. A Tourist Levy for London is proposed but not yet law, and the rate and timing are unsettled, so treat any figure as provisional and confirm before you book.
Usually not, but the cut-off varies: Rome exempts under-10s, Florence and Porto under-12s, Vienna under-15s, and Paris and several others exempt under-18s. Check the city, since it is set locally.
Often not. Many cities have the accommodation collect it on arrival or at checkout, sometimes in cash, so it lands on top of the room rate you booked. Always read the fine print, especially in Italy and Spain.
It is a separate day-tripper charge of €5 to €10 to enter Venice's historic centre on busy days (roughly April to July 2026), distinct from the overnight city tax. Overnight guests are exempt but must still pre-register.
We web-researched and fact-checked every city against its official city authority, tax office or tourism board, each linked under its city above. Rates change often and some are mid-change for 2026, so always confirm on the official site before you book. Last updated June 12, 2026.
Photo credits
Photos: David Köhler, Adrien Olichon, Léonard Cotte, Dan Novac, Logan Armstrong, Patrick Tomasso, Julian Paefgen, Jonathan Körner, Aayush Gupta, Constantinos Kollias, Florian Wehde, Jacek Dylag, Nick Karvounis, Ouael Ben Salah, Ervin Lukacs, David Rodrigo, Anna Berdnik, Su San Lee, Jorge Fernández Salas, Benjamin Davies, Gregory DALLEAU, Danilo D'Agostino, Spencer Davis, Constantin, Einar H. Reynis, Matthias Mullie, Kaja Sariwating, Alexander Bagno, Adam Wilson, Kevin Perez Camacho, ian kelsall on Unsplash.