Holiday cottage
A holiday cottage, holiday home, or vacation property is accommodation used for holiday vacations. Such properties are typically small homes, such as cottages, that vacationers can rent and run as if it were their own home for the duration of their stay. The properties may be owned by those using them for a vacation, in which case the term second home applies; or may be rented out to holidaymakers through an agency.
Terminology varies among countries. In the United Kingdom this type of property is usually termed a holiday home or holiday cottage; in Australia, a holiday house/home, or weekender; in New Zealand, a bach or crib.
Contents
Characteristics and advantages
A second home or vacation home can be a home owner's asset as renting it could provide additional income. Many vacationers are opting for a single family residence that they can rent on a nightly or weekly basis. In many cases the savings for them are significant compared to hotels or vacation packages. For owners it can be as rewarding as paying the mortgage. As people begin to realize this trend vacation type properties are becoming popular not only for existing homes but also for building one.
Renting a holiday cottage gives vacationers the freedom to eat in, eat out, stay in bed all day and generally come and go as they please. In contrast to this, accommodation in a bed and breakfast or hotel usually involves some sort of restriction on the time of day guests need to vacate their rooms for cleaning and so on.
Young children and babies can be more easily accommodated for in a holiday cottage where the parents do not feel pressure from other families (e.g. in a hotel resort) who may not have young children. The fact that guests are on holiday in a home together, often with three generations in larger houses, brings a much different atmosphere to the holiday.
Holiday cottages are nowadays found across the length and breadth of the UK, with many destinations from town houses to forests. New Forest Holiday Cottages have become more popular in recent years, gaining a higher profile from such news as the New Forest becoming a National Park. Many other areas in the UK have seen a growth in the Holiday Cottage industry such as the Lake District and Cornwall. There are typically two routes to renting a holiday cottage. Either direct with an owner, or through the auspices of a holiday cottage agency. Several holiday home portals list cottages available direct from the owner, and charge an fee for listing the property.
The holiday cottage market in both Canada and the UK is highly competitive – and big business.[1] In the UK, this increased competition has led to significant improvements in the quality of properties on offer – so gone are the swirly carpets and tacky furniture of old, to be replaced by tasteful hues, character furnishings and quality appliances, in some cases providing a standard of accommodation more akin to a 'boutique' hotel. This improvement in standards has in turn contributed to the increase in the popularity of holiday cottages for weekend breaks, offering in many cases the same standard of accommodation as an hotel, yet with the increased freedom that a holiday cottage offers.
One other significant development in the UK holiday cottage market is that of Farm Stays, driven partly by the farmers and the poor returns they get from farming itself, but also by the desire of parents wanting their children to experience rural life first-hand.
The rapid development of the Internet and technologies such as telephony and personal digital assistants that allow people to work from home since circa 1995 has blurred the division between vacation property and a primary residence. Some business people, including the British entrepreneur Richard Branson, use their luxury real estate for both business and leisure purposes. Many internet services have developed to connect short term rental customers with owners or brokers of vacation properties.
Numbers
United Kingdom
Holiday/second homes in England, 2006 | ||
Region | Number | % |
Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly | 13,458 | 5.6% |
Cumbria | 7,906 | 3.4% |
Dorset | 10,540 | 3.2% |
Norfolk | 11,857 | 3.1% |
Devon | 14,813 | 3.0% |
East Sussex | 7,583 | 2.1% |
Northumberland | 2,805 | 2.0% |
North Yorkshire | 7,074 | 1.9% |
West Sussex | 6,266 | 1.8% |
Suffolk | 5,414 | 1.8% |
Wales
Holiday homes and second homes comprise 14% of the housing stock in Snowdonia, Wales, compared to the figure of 1% for the whole of Wales.[2] Only in Gwynedd has the council put in place measures to control the number of holiday homes. But they only control new developments, by withholding permission where consent is likely to raise the figure in any community above 10%, they do not stop anyone from buying a holiday home.[3]
Cornwall
The number in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly was calculated to be 5.6% in 2004 and 2006,[4] this is the region which has the highest number of second homes in England.[5] Within a year alone, between 2004 and 2005, the percentage of holiday/second homes in England increased by 3.3%.[6]
Scotland
Holiday/second homes in Scotland, 2006[3] |
||
Region | % | |
Argyll and Bute | 11.1% | |
Eilean Siar | 7.2% | |
Scottish Highlands | 6.2% | |
Orkney Islands | 5.3% | |
Shetland Islands | 3.6% | |
Perth and Kinross | 3.1% | |
North Ayrshire | 2.4% | |
Dumfries and Galloway | 2.3% | |
Scottish borders | 2.3% | |
Moray | 2.2% | |
Aberdeenshire | 1.8% | |
South Ayrshire | 1.5% | |
Stirling | 1.4% | |
East Lothian | 1.2% | |
Angus | 1.1% | |
Fife | 0.9% | |
Edinburgh | 0.7% | |
Aberdeen | 0.6% | |
Clackmannanshire | 0.2% | |
Dundee | 0.2% | |
East Ayrshire | 0.2% | |
Falkirk | 0.2% | |
Glasgow | 0.2% | |
Inverclyde | 0.2% | |
South Lanarkshire | 0.2% | |
West Dunbartonshire | 0.2% | |
East Dunbartonshire | 0.1% | |
East Renfrewshire | 0.1% | |
North Lanarkshire | 0.1% | |
Renfrewshire | 0.1% | |
West Lothian | 0.1% |
There were 29,299 holiday/summer homes in Scotland on the 2001 Scottish Census, which accounted for 1.3% of Scotland's housing stock.[7] This figure was 19,756 in 1981, but the majority of the increase occurred during the 1990s. The greatest increase was seen in urban areas, contrary to the usual trends, and increased especially in Edinburgh and Aberdeen. But the majority of holiday/second homes are still to be found in rural areas, notably, 47% of these are to be found in the remote rural areas, where one in every eight house is a holiday or second home.[8]
France
The figure in France is also fairly high: approximately 10% of all the housing stock is a holiday or second home, but the majority of these are owned by French. There are approximately 300,000 homes, or 1% of the total housing stock which are the property of owners from abroad. Of this percentage 28% are owned by British owners, 14% Italian, 10% Belgian, 8% Dutch, 3% Spanish and 3% American.[9]
United States
Holiday/second homes in north east U.S.A., 2000 |
||
State | Number | % |
Maine | 103,569 | 15.89% |
Vermont | 44,006 | 14.95% |
New Hampshire | 57,251 | 10.47% |
Delaware | 26,600 | 7.75% |
Massachusetts | 97,434 | 3.72% |
New Jersey | 115,439 | 3.49% |
New York | 250,199 | 3.26% |
Rhode Island | 13,624 | 3.10% |
Pennsylvania | 154,495 | 2.94% |
Maryland | 42,541 | 1.98% |
Connecticut | 25,565 | 1.84% |
District of Columbia | 2,811 | 1.02% |
West Virginia | 38,326 | 0.54% |
In 2000, 3,578,718, or 3.09% of the American housing stock, were holiday or second homes, compared with 2.66% in 1990, and 1.87% in 1980. 26% of all these are located in the north-eastern states, with approximately 250,199 (7% of all the second homes in the U.S.) located in New York, and Maine having the largest percentage of its housing stock as second homes.[10]
Canada
Second homes are immensely popular, particularly during Canada's summer season. They are referred to differently in different parts of the country; in Ontario it is usually 'cottage', while 'cabin' or 'the lake' is used in much of the rest of Canada. In Ontario, the most popular destination is the Muskoka region of Ontario, known for its many lakes and forests. Muskoka is even referred to as "cottage country" and sees over 2.1 million visitors annually. On the East Coast, the Maritimes are home to many oceanfront cottages. Likewise, British Columbia on the West Coast is another popular vacation destination for seekers of vacation properties. In the Canadian Prairies and British Columbia Interior, vacation properties are located near or on freshwater lakes. Chalets at ski resorts are also common during winter.
Costs and effects
Financial and legal implications
In the UK, furnished holiday lettings offer other tax relief providing certain conditions are met. The current conditions are:
- It should be available for commercial letting to the public for a total of 140 days in the 12-month period.
- It must be let for at least 70 days in the 12-month period. (Where more than one qualifying property is held, it is possible to average the number of days all properties are let in total in order to meet this condition.)
- The total periods of long term occupation may not exceed 155 days during the 12-month period.
Second home and holiday home owners used to be able to claim discounts in their council tax in the United Kingdom, as the property is vacant for much of the year. This is no longer true in many areas, including Carmarthenshire; if the property is empty (but furnished) no discount is permitted and the owner will be liable to pay the tax in full.[11] But, In Cornwall, since 2004 second home owners can claim a 10% discount in their council tax.[4] Prior to 2004, they could claim a 50% discount in Cornwall,[12] they are still able to claim 50% in many other areas in England.[5] The Welsh movement, Cymuned, promote the principle that owners of holiday homes should pay double the standard rate of council tax, as they do not otherwise invest in the local community.[13] Testimony of this is to be seen in a report on the effect of holiday homes in Scotland, which found that those who went on holiday to Scotland spent an average of £57 a day, in comparison to just £32 a day spent by those visiting their holiday or second homes.[3]
Community
Owners of holiday homes will occasionally move to their second homes permanently upon retirement, this can be a threat to the culture of an area, especially in Wales where the influx of non-Welsh speakers affects the percentage of Welsh speakers in the area and reduces the use of Welsh in everyday life.[13][14] Hundreds of second homes were burnt between 1979 and the mid-1990s as a part of a campaign by nationalist movement Meibion Glyndŵr to protect the indigenous language and culture.
See also
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References
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