Sunday 5 August 2012

Resort Developments in The Bahamas


Hotels in The Bahamas have been one of the most important aspects of the nation’s tourism industry. In the 1920’s and 1930s during the Prohibition in the United States, guests were accommodated at the major hotels – the New Colonial, the Fort Montagu, completed in 1926, and the Royal Victoria. Hotel operators enticed travelers with sporting tournaments and other sightseeing activities at the historical landmarks of New Providence. Foreign elite were lured by the exclusive Porcupine Club on Hog Island (now Paradise Island), the posh Bahamian Club on West Bay Street and others such as the Cat Cay and Bimini Rod and Gun Clubs. The Bahamian Club, which opened in 1920, was the first gambling facility in the Bahamas.

In the 1950s and 1960s, tourists flocked to the new resorts just west of Nassau at Cable Beach and to Paradise Island in the 1960s and 1970s. With its exclusive environment, Paradise Island soon drew other major investors like Merv Griffin and Donald Trump, whose creative genius made the island of paradise one of the most popular holiday destinations of all time.

Surely, establishing a hotel in The Bahamas can easily be one of the most important milestones of your lifetime. Boasting one of the world most attractive beaches, a stable government, and friendly culture, establishing a Bahamas based resort is a sound asset that will greatly benefit the pockets of its investors in the long term. Coupled with a strong commitment by the Bahamas Government to promote the islands of the archipelago along with incentive driven legislation, The Bahamas continues to be one of the most popular destinations to establish a vacation resort.

Defining a Hotel under Bahamian Law

Under previous Bahamian legislation a hotel means any building or a group of buildings enjoying common ancillary services in which accommodation is provided for reward for guests by a common management, and that the buildings contain no fewer than four bedrooms for the use of guests as sleeping accommodation, or be equipped with no fewer than ten beds for such use.

The recent amendments to the Hotels Act has now altered the definition of a hotel to include the concept of the “owner occupied rental home and owner occupied property” which is defined as “property occupied by a person who being the owner in fee simple or as a mortgager in possession, occupies and resides in such property exclusively as a dwelling house on a permanent or seasonal basis”. It seems that the minimum requirements of no fewer than four bedrooms for the use of guests as sleeping accommodation, or be equipped with no fewer than ten beds for such use, as required in the previous act, no longer apply.

Due to the recent concept of the condo hotel, the Hotels Act defines a condo hotel, as a building used as both a condominium and a hotel, thus allowing the owner to rent his unit to other visitors like any other hotel room, when the unit is not in use. Under Bahamas legislation a condo-hotel is a hotel which satisfies the following requirements:
  • it shall be licensed under this Act and shall pay hotel license fees;
  • it shall pay hotel guest
  • it shall pay business license fees;
  • it shall pay real property taxes, if applicable; and
  • individual units shall remain in the hotel’s general rental pool for a minimum period of nine months per year.

Licensing a Bahamian Hotel

Obtaining a Hotel License

The Hotels Act provides the Hotel licensing Board with the authority to grant hotel licenses to its applicants wishing to operate a hotel in The Bahamas having regard to the need in the public interest to maintain an efficient hotel industry in The Bahamas. Through application made by the hotel operator, the hotel licensing board may also provide temporary licenses and play a deciding role in the, the transfer of licenses from one party to another, as well as varying any terms and conditions in which a hotel license can be held.

Under section 6 of the Hotels Act the licensing board also has the authority to establish the duration of the hotel license, which normally takes effect and expires on the 31st day of December each year (for hotels in New Providence and Grand Bahama), and in any other case, on the thirty-first day of March, and may also provide an extension of the hotel license for further periods after the normal expiration date subject to the payment of the hotel licensing fee.

Fees Involved in Bahamian Hotel Ownership

Hotel license fees and Hotel guest tax are two types of fees involved in hotel ownership in The Bahamas. According to the Hotels Act, hotel license fees are paid to the hotel license board in respect thereof for the sum of three (3) dollars for each bedroom provided in the hotel for the use of guests as sleeping accommodation (S15 Hotels Act). This amount is applicable to hotels having:
  • fewer than ten bedrooms for use of guests as sleeping accommodation or equipped with fewer than twenty (20) beds for such use in New Providence;
  • in any Out Island either having fewer than twenty-five (25) bedrooms, or equipped with fewer than twenty (20) beds.
Under S16 of the Hotels Act, hotel guest taxes are paid by each guest of any hotel for the period during which the guest is provided with sleeping accommodation, at which the sum of six (6%) percent is charged of the total room rate for the period which the guest is provided with sleeping accommodation. Under legislation it is the duty of the hotel operator to collect the guest tax from its guest and make payment to the Public Treasury and, if permitted by the hotel licensing board, may be paid in installments or at such periods as may be prescribed (S17, Hotels Act).

Under Section 21 of the Hotels Act the hotel operator is required to keep and maintain financial records of the hotel, which may be inspected by the Minister or any person authorized by him in that behalf. This also includes make copies of any documents which relate or appear to relate to the financial records of the hotel. The Minister also holds the authority to request any information pertaining to the hotel operation as required by the Minister.

Default of Payment and Penalty for Operating without a Hotel License

The Hotel Licensing Board may by notice in writing require the operator of the hotel to remedy the default within such time, not being less than fifteen days, as may be specified in the notice. The Board may, where there is a license in force in respect of the hotel, by instrument in writing cancel that license, if an hotel is in default as alleged by a notice and the operator thereof fails within the time specified in the notice to remedy the default complained of by the Board.

Section 23 of the Hotels Act establishes the application of a fine for hotels operating without a license and the non-payment of hotel guest tax which includes:
  • A fine of $500.00 each day of operation without grant of a hotel license (S23)
  • A fine of $600.00 or, (at the election of the Minister) treble the amount of unpaid hotel tax unpaid.
Supplementary Licenses

Apart from the grant of a hotel license a hotel operator may also want to have other tourist based businesses as part of the hotel operation. Most Bahamian hotels provide at the minimum, the sale of food and alcoholic beverages, while larger hotel operations will have more operations (i.e. gambling facilities, beauty/ massage parlors, city tours, etc.) which are either contracted to local Bahamians or operated by the hotel establishment. It is important that either the contractor or hotel establishment has obtained the legal right to conduct any business services by obtaining the necessary business licenses to do so.

Determining which licensing authority to apply to will depend on the type of business the applicant will want to establish. Hotel operations wishing to operate gambling facilities must apply to the Bahamas Gaming Board in order to obtain a license, while hotel operations wishing to sell liquor must apply to the Liquor Licensing Board for an operating license