JAPAN

Japan Times-June 20

The government should ensure that regulations don’t hamper the growth of the minpaku industry, which is contributing ot the sharp increase in inbound tourism.  As a new law on minpaku (private lodging services) took effect this month, the number of rental properties registered with local governments, as required under the law, amounted to only about 2,700 across Japan — far fewer than the roughly 62,000 properties listed on the popular rental website Airbnb just months ago. While the low-cost lodging is popular with the rapidly growing number of inbound travelers, people offering their private houses and rooms up for rent had to either get a license to operate a simple service under the law regulating hotels and inns or to win permission to run minpaku in special government-designated deregulation zones. Under the new law, people can now offer their properties for rent for up to 180 days a year if they register with their local governments — including in residential areas where it was forbidden to operate hotels or inns.

Read more at: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2018/06/20/editorials/review-minpaku-regulations-spur-growth/#.Wyp5QakxVTg

First published in: Japan Times