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Atlanta may collect back hotel taxes, thanks to court ruling

June 17, 2009 at 8:07 pm by Scott Henry in News

The AJC reported yesterday that the city of Columbus just won a big lawsuit against Expedia over the question of whether the online travel agency was cheating the city out of a portion of the hotel occupancy tax. The Georgia Supreme Court ruled 4-3 that, yes, the company was doing just that.

This is very good news for Atlanta, which is currently suing 17 travel websites — Travelocity, Orbitz, Priceline.com, etc. — over just the same issue. Says Atlanta City Attorney Jerry Deloach:

“Atlanta is pleased with the Supreme Court’s decision and looks forward to recovering past due occupancy taxes in its pending case, as well as securing compliance with state and local tax laws going forward.”

The way online travel agencies make money is they buy up blocks of hotel rooms at a discount, then market those rooms to consumers at a higher rate.

The cities, however, are claiming that while the websites pay the local hotel tax — 7 percent in Atlanta — based on their discounted price, they charge the customers the tax based on the full retail price, and pocket the difference. The argument is that cities should be collecting taxes that correspond to the final rate that a customer pays to stay in a hotel room.

Look for Atlanta to announce a legal settlement in coming months.

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4 Responses to “Atlanta may collect back hotel taxes, thanks to court ruling”

  1. lizzie Says:

    Way to go Columbus! Thanks for helping other cities like Atlanta. You rock.

  2. Julian Bene Says:

    Hotel-motel tax crumbs, better than nothing, but just barely.

    Mary Norwood’s astonishingly wordy e-mail today on ‘Taxes and Financial accountability’ buries this gem towards the end.
    <>

    Mary, where have you been? In six years of rapid growth, Atlanta has managed to eke out not one dollar of extra property tax and almost no extra sales tax. If you refuse to acknowledge that horrendous failure, what hope that you’d ensure any future growth worked for residents’ benefit?

  3. Julian Bene Says:

    Mary’s message in full, since the excerpt did not copy here.

    http://www.marynorwoodformayor.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=47&Itemid=89

    Atlanta could forego a tax increase if it had a buck for every word of her excuse for not saying how she’d balance the budget.

  4. S. Dekalb Voter Says:

    Mary’s frontrunner status will quickly evaporate if she doesn’t get better communication people in her campaign.

    Who in the world decided to send such a long email? What a joke. She, and her campaign, needs to get their heads out of a textbook if they plan on winning this race.

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