Let's face it: Solo travelers often get the short end of the stick when it comes to cruise vacations.
06.01.2025 - 16:49 / travelandleisure.com / Josh Green
When Hawaii's legislative session opens on Jan. 15, one of the first orders of business will be voting on a new fee for incoming tourists.
In a Dec. 31, 2024 memorandum, Hawaii Gov.
Josh Green announced plans for “building a climate-resilient Hawaii” which would include a fee for tourists that would help fund the state’s conservation efforts.
“The administration has also been working on proposing the ‘Green Fee” to the legislature. The initiative will require visitors to pay a fee to help fund climate resilience initiatives,” the statement read. “These funds will support efforts to preserve and protect our environment and promote clean energy solutions.
As a result, these efforts will help build a more resilient, sustainable Hawaii for our future generations.”
The fee would be in addition to Hawaii’s existing tourism tax — 10.25 percent with an additional 3 percent in some counties.
Initially, Green campaigned on a $50 flat fee for tourists during the 2022 election. A year later, officials proposed establishing a visitor impact fee program which would charge travelers a fee to buy a license to visit a state park, forest, hiking trail, or other state natural area. The initiative fell short and was not passed.
At the start 2024, a bill calling for a «modest fee» for tourists that would generate more than $68 million in revenue each year and increase awareness of the impacts of climate change was introduced.
Weeks later, state lawmakers chose not to pass the initiative despite devastating wildfires that ravaged Maui’s western coast mere months prior in August 2023, which resulted in more than 100 deaths and destruction of historic Lāhainā.
Hawaii is far from the only destination imposing a tourism tax. In September 2024,New Zealand nearlytripled the fee for international visitors and on Dec. 1, 2024 the Maldives began a departure tax that ensures travelers contribute to island preservation.
Let's face it: Solo travelers often get the short end of the stick when it comes to cruise vacations.
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