Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Editorial Argues Short Term Leasing Makes House an Inn for Tax Purposes

From the Northwest Indiana Times:


Today's topic is the ins and outs of inns. Or, to put it another way, should short-term home rentals be subject to the innkeeper's tax?
The way Speros Batistatos, president and CEO of the South Shore Convention and Visitors Authority, sees it, those houses should be taxed. He's right.
Batistatos convinced Lake County Treasurer John Petalas and County Auditor Peggy Katona last week that more than a dozen homes in Gary's Miller Beach area and on Cedar Lake's shoreline haven't paid their fair share of the tax.
...
This is not a case of loaning a house to friends; this is clearly a business proposition. These homes are being rented out to paying guests, just like a hotel or motel room. Homes rented for short-term stays should be subject to taxation.
Half of Lake County's 5 percent innkeeper's tax, paid by the hotel and motel industry, supports Batistatos' agency. The rest goes to the Indiana University School of Medicine program at Indiana University Northwest, the Purdue University Calumet nursing program and to municipal governments in Lake County.
The distribution formulas for the innkeeper's tax in Porter and LaPorte counties are different.
The move to collect an innkeeper's tax on short-term rentals of homes makes sense. The owners are, in essence, turning these private homes into inns. Use the tax as a way to generate additional revenue to promote tourism in the region.