Asking for tourist tax to be left cash in the accommodation

Upvote:3

You are correct, they should have given you a receipt. Many cities have official forms and regulations for these receipts; see e.g. Milan, Florence, Rome, Verona... : they all mention a ricevuta or quietanza.

Even if there is no form, they can write and sign a piece of paper with the hotel's letterhead stating that they got the money from you.

If they refuse, you have every right to threaten to get the local police involved.

Upvote:9

Multiple cities in Italy (and some other European countries) do have a "City Tax" or "Tourist Tax" which is generally a fixed amount charged on a per-night/per-occupant basis for transient accommodation like hotels and AirBNB.

This tax is generally NOT included in the stated price of the accommodation, and IS paid locally to the accommodation provider at check-out.

AirBNB do claim that they collect this tax in a number of locations across Italy, however they also state that they do NOT collect it in all locations and/or for all potential taxes that are payable.

Booking.com do generally states very clearly when booking that the City Tax is NOT included. For example, I just searched for properties in Rome and all included a statement to show that this tax was not included in the price displayed :

booking.com price

This very clearly states how much the City Tax is, and that it is NOT included in the price being paid - thus implying it needs to be paid locally at the property, even if you were pre-paying the booking.

If a tax is being charged then the property certainly should be able to provide a receipt, and I've always had such taxes listed on my final invoice from hotels, but I can't speak for AirBNB-style providers. From an expenses perspective for business travel, most companies have a process for such charges where a receipt is not available for some reason.

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