Kyoto raised its accommodation tax rates on 1 April 2026, introducing a new top-tier rate of ¥10,000 per person per night for rooms priced above ¥100,000, a 900% increase on the previous flat top rate. Annual revenue is projected to roughly double, from ¥5.9 billion to ¥12.6 billion, according to Kyoto City Hall figures relayed through Japan Specialist 1. The tiered structure below the top rate was also adjusted, though the headline is carrying the political weight.
The city's framing is that the rise is a user-pays measure to fund overtourism countermeasures in a destination that has seen tourist arrivals recover past their 2019 peak. Preservation of temple precincts, crowd management on the routes through Gion and Arashiyama, and public-transport capacity on the JR and Keihan lines serving the historic core are the specific programmes the revenue is earmarked for. The 900% figure is what carries the political message: Kyoto residents, who have spent three consecutive years protesting against overtourism pressures on buses and neighbourhood streets, are being shown that the city's tools are proportionate to the scale of the complaint.
The economic mechanism is narrower than the headline suggests. Rooms priced above ¥100,000 per night in Kyoto are a small share of total room-nights: ryokan suites, flagship hotel categories, and premium service apartments used for long-stay bookings. A ¥10,000 uplift on a ¥150,000 room is a 6.7% price increase at the point of sale, which is well inside the range of seasonal pricing variation that existing booking patterns already absorb. The revenue projection of ¥12.6 billion a year assumes that demand at that price tier is broadly inelastic, which the 2023-to-2025 Kyoto recovery data supports.
Kyoto's hoteliers' association and the larger international operators push back on this, arguing that progressive accommodation taxes at this magnitude risk shifting premium corporate and long-stay bookings to competitor destinations, notably Osaka and Nara, which have not matched the rate. That is a coherent commercial argument with limited immediate evidence behind it; short-haul redistribution of premium bookings typically takes one full planning cycle to show up. The more material question for nomad and long-stay residents is whether the tiered structure below the top rate will be revised upward again in a subsequent budget cycle, which is the pattern Kyoto has followed since introducing the accommodation tax in 2018.
