“We were very satisfied, not only with the money raised, but
even more because it corresponds to double what we had planned”, Rogério
Bacalhau told Lusa, in an assessment of the first year in which the tourist tax
was implemented normally, after two years when it was suspended due to the Covid-19
pandemic.
The tourist tax of €1.50 per night is applied in the
municipality of Faro between March and October of each year, for a maximum
period of seven nights for each stay of guests aged 13 years and over.
According to Rogério Bacalhau, the high amount collected
with this fee makes it possible to conclude that “Faro is currently a tourist
destination, which it was not a few years ago”, and also that “what some
predicted did not happen”, that is, that the tax “would make the tourism sector
lose competitiveness” in the municipalities that applied it.
The mayor assured that the fee will continue to be applied
and hopes that other Algarve municipalities will soon approve regulations to
benefit from this increase in revenue.
For Rogério Bacalhau, “this revenue is also important for
the tourism sector, because it allows for more investments to be made in
improving Faro as a destination”, namely, “in public spaces, in heritage, in
cultural and event offers and in the improvement of services provided” to
tourists.
In the southernmost region of Portugal, this rate is
currently only applied in the municipalities of Faro and, in different ways, in
Vila Real de Santo António.