Excerpt from Dutch News.NL
Airbnb has for the first time revealed that its landlords hosted 2.5 million overnight stays in Amsterdam in 2017.
The landlords had 800,000 visitors, who stayed an average of 3.4 days – almost twice as long as the typical stay in a hotel or guest house that year, the company claims.
The numbers are revealed in a report written by consultancy Ecorys and commissioned by Airbnb, and which looks at the impact of three proposals by Amsterdam city government to control spiralling levels of tourism.
Ban
Yesterday, the city government announced its intention to ban Airbnb rentals entirely in three parts of the city, including the red light district, due to the perceived negative impacts on social cohesion, rising house prices and inequality.
Next year, the maximum number of days that private house owners can rent to tourists will be limited to 30 days, from the current 60. Meanwhile, Dutch MPs have proposed treating home rental infringement as a fiscal crime and cracking down on tax evasion.
The government aims to create a national registration scheme for private rentals within a year, following concerns about illegal rentals and ‘overtourism’.
The new Ecorys report, however, points out that Airbnb accommodation – not including other short term rental brokers such as Booking.com – represents a modest 11.9% of all overnight stays in the Dutch capital. It also claims that its guests are responsible for more than a fifth of the €2.3 billion spent in Amsterdam.
New rules limiting private rentals to 30 nights a year will, the report says, result in 310,000 fewer overnight stays while new hotels in the pipeline will add 3.7 million annual overnight stays by 2022.
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