Nashville Hotel Tax Increase to Begin July 1 as Part of Titans Stadium Deal

A 1 percent increase to Davidson County’s Hotel Occupancy Tax rate will begin next month to begin paying for the approved Tennessee Titans $2.1 billion stadium deal, according to the Metro Nashville Finance Department.

Nashville currently charges a hotel occupancy privilege tax of $2.50 and 6 percent on hotel room stays.

The increased hotel tax rate will be used to repay $760 million in bonds from Nashville’s Sports Authority and $500 million in bonds from the State of Tennessee approved for the stadium project.

The rate increase has been marketed as “user-generated” and “tourism-oriented,” meaning that the new tax rate is intended to predominantly affect tourists who stay in Davidson County hotels instead of Nashville residents.

The increased rate, beginning July 1, is on top of “all other taxes and fees currently levied by the Metropolitan Government,” the finance department notes, adding, “If the Sports Authority of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County has not issued revenue bonds related to the construction of a new, enclosed football stadium by January 1, 2024, the additional 1 percent Hotel Occupancy Privilege Tax will expire on such date.”

In addition to the hotel tax increase, 100 percent of state and local sales tax for sales at the stadium, a $3 ticket tax for stadium events, and 50 percent of state and local taxes in a 130-acre zone drawn around the new stadium will be used to repay the bonds issued for the new facility.

The stadium deal, officially approved on April 26 by the Metro Nashville City Council, has been widely opposed by many Davidson County residents.

Yes, Every Kid

A poll conducted in May found that 56.9 percent of the 500 Davidson County voters surveyed opposed the stadium deal, while only 28.3% supported it and 14.9% were unsure.

The stadium is set to open in 2027.

– – –

Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network.
Photo “Tennessee Titans Stadium” by Paul Brennan.

 

Related posts

4 Thoughts to “Nashville Hotel Tax Increase to Begin July 1 as Part of Titans Stadium Deal”

  1. Ms Independent

    I wouldn’t visit Nashville after these ridiculous taxes! And to sponsor a “woke” NFL loser team??
    Better ways to spend hard earned dollars….

  2. Horatio Bunce

    This seems like a very risky proposal for Nashville, given the propensity of Lockdown Lee to executive order them (and the hotels apparently necessary to tax so they can play football) right out of business for months at a time, or maybe forever if he feels like it. Our state government has shown no interest in reeling in his “executive order powers”, regardless of which civil rights are violated or which mom-and-pop business was torpedoed by them – only in special sessions for $850M corporate welfare for Ford’s gay electric rainbow trucks – and stealing Tennessee farms. Again, good to see these billionaire businesses getting a leg up at taxpayer expense.

    How many hotel rooms do those executive ordered cardboard cutout titan fans need? Do real, live titan fans enjoy Cooper’s ridiculous, constituion-skirting, no-jury $50 mask fines?

  3. Truthy McTruthFace

    keep killing the golden goose, greedy SOBS

  4. JRin

    Who gets the tax money AFTER the stadium is paid off?

Comments