
How do tourism taxes impact travelers’ choices? – Image: Christian Ohde/chromorange/picture alliance
From Venice to Barcelona, overcrowded travel destinations are taxing vacationers. But the question remains as to whether such strategies really help reduce overtourism — and where the money generated goes.
High tourist taxes did not stop 39-year-old Susanne Meier from visiting the Himalayan country of Bhutan twice. In fact, Bhutan boasts the world’s highest tourist tax, known as the “Sustainable Development Fee.” Tourists are charged $100 (€95) per person per day to visit — a steep price tag for most travelers. The tourism tax comes in addition to additional required travel costs, such as a driver and guide, which are services usually arranged by tour companies for an extra price.
“The people there want slow tourism, not cheap tourism,” says Meier, who works for the travel company Bhutan Travel based in Moosburg, Bavaria. “When tourists see the positive effect that the tax has there, they are happy to pay it,” she says of her customers.
Tax goes toward improving Bhutan
Bhutan’s tourism authority says this revenue goes directly toward helping the country’s approximately 800,000 citizens. Authorities put tourists’ money toward health care, education and infrastructure while strengthening initiatives that support the environment and help local businesses.
The country reported earning $26 million in revenue in 2023 from the fee.
Of course such a high tourism tax acts also as a deterrent: Authorities reported that just 103,000 tourists visited Bhutan in 2023. The majority of those tourists were from India, the only country whose citizens pay a lower daily tax to visit.
With 962,000 million inhabitants, the population of the Spanish island of Mallorca is similar to that of Bhutan. However, residents there have been inundated with tourists in recent years and have staged numerous protests.
About 13 million people vacationed on the island in 2024. As a result, it’s hardly surprising that many residents have been lobbying to put limits on mass tourism.
The island installed an accommodation tax in 2016. Depending on the hotel category, vacationers must pay up to €4 ($4.16) per day. According to plans by the government of the Balearic Islands, the tax could be raised to six euros, while also being scrapped during wintertime. The money is used to finance projects aimed at making Mallorca more sustainable. However, this tax has done little to deter tourists from visiting — the island sets new tourism records year after year.