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Montana hotel and campground tax revenues exceeded expectations in 2021

Hole-in-the-Wall backcountry campground in Glacier National Park.
David Restivo - National Parks Service (PD)

The amount of tax collected last year from stays at Montana campgrounds, motel and hotel rentals exceeded expectations. The finding was presented Wednesday during an economic seminar by the Bureau of Business and Economic Research.

Jeremy Sage, interim director for the Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research at the University of Montana, says the bed tax exceeded expectations in the spring and summer of 2021 when compared to 2020.

“We are sitting this last summer at 23% higher than we would have been if we had just continued at pre-pandemic expectations. We are sitting at 34% higher in the spring quarter in 2021 compared to what we would’ve thought we would have been.”

Sage says visitors to Glacier and Yellowstone national parks likely drove that increase. In the second quarter of 2021, counties around Glacier saw more than a 200% increase in bed tax collections when compared to 2020. Counties around Yellowstone saw a nearly 300% uptick during the same time period.

The Montana Legislature increased the bed tax by a percent to 4% in 2020.

Corrected: February 4, 2022 at 1:47 PM MST
In an earlier version of this story, we gave the incorrect years for tax collection comparisons. In fact, in the second quarter of 2021, counties around Glacier saw more than a 200% increase in bed tax collections when compared to 2020. Counties around Yellowstone saw a nearly 300% uptick during the same time period. We regret the error.

Freddy Monares was a reporter and Morning Edition host at Montana Public Radio.
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