41 °F Ocean City, US
November 22, 2024

Cape May County’s first-half occupancy tax collection up 22 percent

CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE — Early returns on visitation have been positive for the Cape May County tourism industry. 

The latest data from the New Jersey Treasury indicate occupancy tax collection was up double digits every month during the first two quarters in 2023. That includes spikes of more than 70 percent in the first quarter. 

According to a news release from Cape May County, the Department of Tourism has made a concerted effort to bolster fall and winter marketing over the past five years and the county is seeing success with continued growth in both fall 2022 and winter 2023. 

Occupancy tax collection for July reached $5.289 million, a 12 percent increase over July 2022. Cape May County outpaced all others in New Jersey in occupancy tax collection for July and is trending to surpass the 2022 total of $19.4 million.

Occupancy tax is collected by the state on all hotel and motel stays and is typically 5 percent of the room rate. While the data does not specifically forecast visitation, it provides a year-over-year benchmark and measures overnight stays. 

Increasing occupancy tax is correlated with increasing visitation. The average overnight visitor spends $374 per person/per day.

The percentage increase in collection from this year versus last year through the first six months was 22.1 percent, which is just slightly off the 25.5 percent increase experienced in 2022 over 2021 during the same period.

“Cape May County continues to experience significant growth in the fall and winter seasons. The first quarter of this year produced three times as much occupancy tax as the same months in 2019, which was the last full year prior to COVID,” said Diane Wieland, director of tourism for Cape May County. “These numbers are influenced in part due to inflation, but also impacted by significant growth in shoulder-season visitation.”

Wieland said last year’s growth in tax collection was a leading indicator of visitation growth. 

She said the county had a record 11.38 million visitors this year, an 8.8 percent growth over 2022, according to year-end data provided by the New Jersey Division of Travel and Tourism.

“Tourism marketing is an ever-evolving challenge, requiring preparation, research-driven strategies and the flexibility to adapt our marketing efforts to meet the changing environment. Every year brings new challenges to the tourism industry, growth during these uncertain times doesn’t just happen on its own. The Tourism Department team works hard all year to meet those challenges and the results are in the numbers,” said County Commission Director Leonard Desiderio, liaison to the Tourism Department.

“Occupancy tax data suggest positive signs for 2023 and while encouraging, we will get a clearer picture when more data becomes available. Inflation has impacted core costs for families and in turn has forced many to cancel or shorten their vacation, and with that vacation spending has been adjusted. Reports from many businesses are indicating that 2023 not prove to be as robust as the past two years,” Wieland said.

Related articles

Settlement possible in Klause suit

Ocean City Council meets behind closed doors to weigh options as clock ticks OCEAN CITY — City Council is trying to reach an agreement on the cost of the former Chevy dealership lot before time runs out Dec. 15. The city acquired the land through condemnation in May 2020 to create a stretch of open […]

On mainland, most incumbents re-elected

Northfield voters support cannabis retailers and deliveries 55% to 45% Editor’s note: A version of this story appeared in the online at ocnjsentinel.com on Wednesday, Nov. 9. Incumbents won nearly every election in Somers Point, Linwood and Northfield while voters approved a nonbinding referendum supporting retail marijuana sales and rejected another seeking $2.6 million in […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *