Black Friday Hawaii Travel Deals

Hawaii Vacation Rental Tax Total Of 33% Proposed 

This controversial bill appears to be discriminatory against legal Hawaii vacation rentals. Read all the details.

Continue reading

Leave a Comment

Comment policy:
* No political party references.
* No profanity, rudeness, personal attacks, or bullying.
* Hawaii-focused "only."
* No links or UPPER CASE text. English only.
* Use a real first name.
* 1,000 character limit.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

125 thoughts on “Hawaii Vacation Rental Tax Total Of 33% Proposed ”

  1. For all the tourists who are threatening not to ever visit again, that’s the point ! Hawaiians are sick of overtourism and the damage it causes to our islands. There will still be plenty of visitors coming and the state gets extra revenue for local programs.
    And if you are an owner complaining about lost income, especially if you live on the mainland, how about you tell us about how many $100,000’s your unit has appreciated in value because visitor numbers are at a record !!!

    3
    1. Yes, Ainakea, thanks for representing the point of view of the islands so eloquently. Our visitors will stop coming, and we can be left to damage our islands, have wild parties in our neighborhoods, trash our streets and the beaches, have drag races on our roads, and drive drunk down our highways, all on our own.

      Just don’t come to the council meetings complaining about lack of revenue and the tripling of your taxes. You had your chance, but chose lack of aloha instead.

      2
    2. It seems that so many people have all of the answers. Have you considered Why there is an explosion of new construction occurring across the counties? Why all of the Timeshares are being built? I’m Certain that you all have been living under the delusion that tourism will be reduced permanently, so then why do you need more hotel rooms and timeshares?

    3. Ainakea R do you actually realize what it must be like to have a wonderful home which you rent out certain times of the year? I doubt that you do. Imagine being limited by restrictions on how long you Must rent the property And how many times per year. Your rental no longer appeals to most tourists so you lose income, plenty of it. You pay Much Higher property taxes and must pay license fees. Average people couldn’t afford to rent/lease the property and lowering the price isn’t possible. That’s what has and is happening. You have no idea what you are talking about, sincerely.

  2. This proposed legislation is illegal at best. What is worse is the legislators wasting time and taxpayer money proposing these type bills that clearly violate the State and countries constitution. Strongly suggest voting for individuals that have kindergarten level understanding of the law. Tax money can be more wisely spent.

    3
    1. Have to agree with you, legislators, in general, seem to love wasting time and money on legislation that has no chance of passing.

      Sincere question: how would this be a constitutional violation?

      2
      1. The position of the Hawaii Tax Foundation is that “This Bill violates the United States Constitution as well as the Hawaii State Constitution. It disenfranchises a certain category of taxpayer from those that are similarly situated. It is discriminatory in that it does not treat all providers of transient accommodations the same.”

        4
  3. We throughly enjoyed staying at a vrbo home rather than a hotel. It allowed four different households to be in the same place and not bother anyone with our time schedule. It also allowed us to mingle with the locals rather than being in high tourist spots every day. We paid about the same if not slightly more to stay at the house in Keaau. And it allowed us to use the small businesses like local grocery stores, farmer’s markets, and restaurants every day. We would like to come back and visit these beautiful islands and have the same situation that we had rather than give money to greedy cooperations with hotels taking up beach real estate.

    5
  4. Ok, well Hawaii, just be clear. I’m fine to find somewhere else. For years now I’ve really enjoyed the ability to rent a condo for 3-4 weeks a year and immerse into your lovely islands. If I have become a burden and you need to add 30% lodging tax on top of the car rental taxes etc, ok I get it. Sorry, hotel stays are not an option for me, not into that, and no way I am going to buy into a time share, so Yes such a tax prices me out of Hawaii, but I get it. Sorry the price and taxes now are excessive, go higher… sorry its over I will miss you.
    Aloha

    5
    1. It’s not that they need to have all these fees, they have plenty of money already. Maui budget this year is 1 billion dollars, for 150,000 residents, with visitors paying the vast majority of it.

      The fees are being raised because money talks. It’s the only thing the government can think of to keep you away.

      1
      1. With a budget of One Billion Dollars, basically all Tourism Funded, Maui should want for Nothing. Reasonable Housing should be plentiful and the Hawaii Homeless on Maui should be fully and properly Housed. With the Unbelievably Large Remainder of Money every problem and project should be completed fully. After that, each year the minor upkeep needed should be minimal and Budgetary Reserves immense. What is difficult about this? That’s just a blueprint for success, instead watch what happens.

        1
    2. That is such a sincere Good Bye, I too understand where you’re coming from and probably where you will be going to. Maybe one day we will cross paths never knowing it! When getting a “loan” from a loan “Specialist” so to speak (think great white) is less costly than a night’s accommodation in Hawaii, you know that something is Smelling Sour in the 50th State. Good Luck in your new vacation ventures, compared to Hawaii you’ll be able to afford several!

  5. Glad I have stopped going to Hawaii. This once beautiful place now does not welcome visitors. Attitude is so poor and with money grabbing everywhere. I now go to San Diego. Beautiful, welcoming palm trees and much cheaper flights.

    3
  6. Well. I guess you politicians would rather our islands be rid of all tourism so us locals can go back to grass huts and coconuts. Tourism is our lively hood. It’s not the tourist fault that the state and counties mis use what funds are collected to improve infrastructure. We have lived with consistent droughts, one way in and out of Lahaina. No alternative routes to avoid major accidents. One hospital
    I could go on. Born and raised here. And our islands are an embarrassment. The greed is incredible and for what?! No wonder locals moving to Vegas, Arizona, Texas. What..no other solution?!

    11
    1. Exactly, I have been going to Maui since 2008 and in all that time I have yet to see where my text dollars have gone, the roads still suck, they flood often and have big potholes, I think that all the taxes going to the politicians pockets because they sure aren’t fixing anything

  7. Hotels were built to house tourists. Give the neighborhoods back to the people who live and work here. Disgusting to buy a second home so u can get visitors to spend 5000 a week. There is no homes for residents. Glad u get the tax rate up, should just ban the vacation rentals in residential areas. Minimum 90 day rentals with rent control is next step. You come to visit just to force workers to do two or three jobs to afford insane prices of limited rental possibilities. Don’t expect any kindness in return.

    1
      1. Came here to ask the same. The problem is obviously no new affordable housing being built, but of course it’s much easier and more satisfying to blame luxury condo and homeowners than our own government. Great job; let’s keep voting them in!

  8. This bill reads like it was created by the hotel industry and is incredibly naive. It will make the vacation zone condos less competitive with the homes in non-vacation zone areas (which are exactly the properties people want to rent long-term), resulting in the opposite effect the authors are intending. It is unlikely that any of these vacation zone condos will become long-term housing for residents. It is more likely that they will sit empty and places like Kona will lose a lot of sales tax and tourist revenue since there are so few hotels.

    There are better ways to address the issue of housing costs.

    3
    1. Yes, in fact, the recent quadrupling of taxes on condo owners here that could potentially rent out their units short-term, has forced them to start renting out short-term when they never have before just to pay the taxes! More units for more visitors! Unintended consequences sometimes bring us the opposite of what we want, and we deserve it!

  9. I am so sorry to hear this. I have b een visiting since the 70’s. Very respectable and honored the land and its people. Last year, was a Maui mecca and although tourists were unintelligent about how they were raised (some)….many were not, but the the posts on social media have spooked me right off the islands. They are threatening and bullies and should be stopped, but now they will be happy as their island shrinks. I shall not return as this triple increase on rentals is out of my wallet. What a shame, it was my and always has been my dream to enjoy my golden years on this beautiful island. I do cry. Izzy makes me cry and he is crying in the heavens.

    1
  10. Keep it up Hawaii, you will eventually kill the goose that laid the golden egg. Tourism is your industry. We have been coming here for over twenty years and this is our last. Prices are getting out of hand and the spirit of aloha is being replaced by greed and disrespect for visitors.
    Thanks but no thanks, we’re done

    15
  11. Hi ,
    Perhaps the push to prevent the local citizens to use their home for vacation rentals is being strongly advocated by the hotel industry to prevent the “small” businessperson from earning a living. Are Politicians getting “feedback” dollarwise, therefore not helping their constituents?

    8
  12. This bill will further erode visitors who would like to visit Hawaii. Look at the loss of restaurants and the jobs already
    No jobs means no income how will that improve the local economy

    11
  13. Our family has come to the conclusion that Hawaii does not really want tourists….. just our money. We have been vacationing in Hawaii since the 80’s and since COVID we have felt very unwelcomed. You want our money but you barely tolerate us. We will be vacationing in Europe from now on. Aloha.

    17
  14. No more airbnbs.

    Unless host lives on the property.

    In which case it’s not a rental property really.

    Airbnb started as a place for people to share a hosts home now it’s just a bunch of greedy people buying up extra homes taking things away locals would use. Airbnb needs to be stopped tax them to death till they lose interest and it’s not worth it.
    Stop booking. Seriously airbnbs sometimes even rent regular apartments not just buy homes just to Airbnb it out its horrendous what we’ll do to make money in this country. Like who cares if locals have a place to rent and live and work. I hope locals all get pushed out and there’s no one left to serve all these tourists.
    Tax them to death.

    2
    1. Airbnb has nothing to do with anything. There have been thousands of vacation rentals here since the 1950’s, long before Airbnb, even before we were a state. Why do you think you are able to remain here at all?

      The ignorance on these islands is astounding.

      2
  15. Wow! I know that Hawaii wants our money but doesn’t really want us there but this is over the top.

    I wish some Visitor Education could become a thing; I’m a recycler, don’t waste water, am aware of which sunscreens are safer for the oceans, try to be culturally sensitive and aware, etc. Some people don’t care about these things.

    By the way, your pop-up ads cover a lot of your page content and are making the site increasingly difficult to read. But it’s the best true-facts Hawaii site I know of, mahalo!

    11
  16. It is interesting that they are not addressing how the additional revenue wold be spent. If there argument is that homeowners are using there property as a vacation rental and not being used as a long-term rental well, it would appear to me that is within the owner’s rights. The state is already taxing the heck out of not only visitors but also their citizenry. Over taxation is only one of the issues. The residents of this state have really never exercised their rights in holding the state and local governments responsible and have just allowed them to do as they please. They truly don’t realize that there is power in numbers to make changes so that the state would not be compared to other “third world countries”.

    15
    1. They are not overtaxing their citizenry. Hawaii is the #1 state for lowest resident taxes in the nation.

      At the same time, Hawaii has one of the highest accommodation taxes in the nation.

      Our visitors essentially pay us to live here.

      1
  17. Just when you think you’ve heard the ultimate in lunacy/greed we hear yet another story that’s even more absurd. As pointed out, Hawaiian taxes are already the highest in the U.S. with every entity having their hand out to fleece the tourism industry. GET tax, TAT tax, County tax not to mention the already resident property tax and sales tax. Is there any end to the greed? And at what point to folks push back and decry “Enough”.?
    If the point is to continue to tax until tourism dries up and blows away, I’d say you are on the right track as we’ve read numerous contributors tell us that they are looking elsewhere for their next vacation solely due to the costs to take their family on vacation. Very bad thinking indeed.

    33
    1. And at what point to folks push back and decry “Enough”.?

      Every election year you can push back! But you keep electing the same people over and over, you keep getting the same result. Insanity? Next election vote for “the other guy”. But until you change your government, things will always be the same. FYI, politicians, regardless of party, do not care about you.

      3
  18. I believe that taxation is the wrong mechanism to achieve the desired goal. It would be far better to make it easier for counties to zone areas where transitory vacation rentals can be located. The objective being to allow residents to enjoy their homes without the traffic and activity being brought into their residential area and to allow those who find vacation rentals better meet their needs to enjoy the islands. As a personal belief I think enforcing a requirement that vacation rentals companies renting in Hawaii should be based in and operate from Hawaii and that way extra revenues could be gathered by the State.

    8
    1. What makes you think the traffic and activity you see from short-term renters would be any different than the traffic and activity you see from long-term renters? In fact, parties and multiple cars in driveways are much more prevalent with long-term renters, and they won’t be leaving in a few days, so you are stuck with them. Not to mention the run-down appearance of long-term rentals, creating blight in the neighborhoods.

      Short-term rentals are very well kept up. They have to be to attract renters. Be careful what you wish for, and solve the right problems in the right way. Build more affordable housing!

      1. I live in an area affected by STVRs. They bring pretty constant traffic, loud groups and add nothing to the neighborhood feel.

        I like to stay in condos but only in vacation areas. Local neighborhoods are no place for holiday merry makers.

        1. I live in an area “affected by STVRs” too, and I don’t get it. How do visitors make More traffic and bring More loud groups than long-term renters, or even owners? Visitors don’t know anybody to bring!

          I love visitors to our islands. They are so eager to experience the advertised aloha, and I love seeing all of their happy faces enjoying their vacation of a lifetime. Makes me very proud to call this my home.

          2
          1. PatG your right, but that is the problem at the same time, so Who is making up these incidents to support the closures of STR Properties by overburdening regulations and obscene taxation? Unfortunately the immediate “Who” in this case might be traced back to the Same People that Lied to residents and the Houseless about STR Properties taking away affordable housing from them, the County Commissioners. Done for voter support for their new plans against STR’S they needed Vocalized and Irate People to back them, thus the Lies! In the end, without STR’S, Who Benefits Most? Hotels/Timeshare/Resort Industry. Collusion is much more than a word in Hawaii!

  19. More Hawaiian Buffoonery!
    Our police are inept and corrupt.
    The state cannot police the police.
    The legislation cannot ever find solutions to simple issues such as these,as they are too busy worrying about their next pay increase.
    And so it goes,and goes and goes.
    Truly the most embarrassing state to live in in our entire union.
    They can double dip and rob the state & Hawaiians blind like they’ve done for 30 year’s.

    Your all fired!!
    Have your desks cleared by 4:00 and out of the building.

    21
    1. What a perfect display of disillusionment, anger, and despair. Some will agree, like I, yet knowing it isn’t that easy to accomplish. The Voters could have, should have, begun replacing them several months ago but didn’t. That is the quickest and most direct way, now convince them to do it. Things won’t change, they may even become more blatant and worse, unless Voter’s mindsets can be. Then hold every politician accountable, force true and lasting change to government at Every Level. Accountability must occur!

      1

Scroll to Top