Cities crack down on Airbnb, but government steers clear

German cities including Hamburg and Berlin are tightening the screw on users of the home-rental platform Airbnb, but the federal government continues to be strangely uninterested.

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Opponents of Airbnb rally before a hearing called "Short Term Rentals: Stimulating the Economy or Destabilizing Neighborhoods?" at City Hall in New York January 20, 2015. Airbnb is a website for people to rent out lodging with over 800,000 listings in 33,000 cities and 192 countries. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES - Tags: CIVIL UNREST BUSINESS SOCIETY REAL ESTATE)

Across Europe, the Airbnb backlash is gathering force, driven by increased regulation and irate hotel lobby groups. In London and Dublin, owners will soon face a 90 day per year cap on renting out their properties to visitors. In Paris, the limit is now 120 days. Barcelona, perhaps the city hardest hit by the short-term rental trend, now takes data directly from Airbnb to enforce tax and zoning laws.

But German cities are taking the hardest line. The governments in Hamburg and Berlin have led the charge against the US home-rental platform. Hamburg has slashed permitted annual rentals per property from 180 days to 60, while raising fines tenfold. Meanwhile, Berlin has set up a registration scheme to control Airbnb rentals: holdouts could be fined €250,000 ($284,000). One of the main motivations is to ensure appropriate taxes are collected.

Germany’s finance ministry, however, has been curiously quiet on the controversial website. In response to parliamentary questions put by Fabio De Masi, finance spokesperson for the opposition Left Party, the ministry was tight-lipped. “There are currently no plans for talks with Airbnb on taxation issues,” it confirmed.

Earlier this year, it had seemed things were changing. Media reports in May suggested that the Federal Central Tax Office, the government agency responsible for enforcing the tax code, had written to Airbnb’s European headquarters in Ireland, demanding data on hosts’ earnings to check them against tax records.

B&B not Airbnb

But the finance ministry, which oversees the Tax Office, refuses to answer questions on that information request. It remains unclear what exactly was requested and what, if any, information was supplied.

Even general questions from Mr. De Masi have gone unanswered by the ministry. Were there general guidelines on mandatory Airbnb tax reporting, outlining the pros and cons of policy in the area? No comment, says the ministry.

The lackadaisical approach of federal authorities contrasts with the increasing vigor of local governments. In Hamburg, which sees two million Airbnb rentals every year, there has been deep resentment within the hotel industry at what it sees as unfair competition.

Airbnb hosts do not currently pay the “culture and tourism” tax that Hamburg hotels are forced to collect. The president of the city’s hotel association, Franz Klein, expressed satisfaction that the city is starting to crack down. “Modern communications media are being used to evade tax laws,” he told Handelsblatt.

For Mr. De Masi, there is a long-term solution already at hand: no Airbnb hosting without a registered tax number, and all information on rentals sent directly to the taxman, Barcelona-style.