The Overnight Visitor Levy Bill sits at the leading edge of a three-layer fiscal-devolution stack. The OUTER layer is the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill, which builds out the Foundation Strategic Authority category and the mayoral architecture into which the levy power is being threaded; the levy Bill is not a free-standing creation but a fiscal limb attached to that wider mayoral settlement 12.
The MIDDLE layer is the enabling Bill itself, announced in the King's Speech 2026 as 'the first step in a new era of fiscal devolution in England' 3. The briefing is explicit that the Bill will set 'the broad conditions under which a levy may be introduced, as well as the structure of the tax' — i.e. it will be a framework Act, not a fully-specified levy. The actual rate, base, exemption design and collection mechanics will sit below it in secondary legislation and in scheme-level decisions taken by individual mayors and constituent authorities.
The BOTTOM layer is the operational template. Scotland's Visitor Levy (Scotland) Act 2024 commenced in September 2024 4, and the March 2026 trio of SSIs on local-authority assessment 5, reviews and appeals 6, and 2024-Act amendments 7, together with the January 2026 interest-and-penalties regulations 8, shows the full administrative shape an English regime is likely to assume: scheme-level by local authority, with a statutory review-then-tribunal appeal route. Wales's parallel collection-and-management costs regulations 9 provide a second template.
The regime's TERRITORIAL boundary is unusual: extent E&W, application England only 3. Cross-border interaction with Wales — a tourist booking a stay near the Wye Valley could in principle face different regimes either side of the border — is the recurring PQ angle to the Secretary of State for Wales 10.
The regime's REVENUE LOGIC is hypothecation-to-place: levy receipts stay with the levying authority for reinvestment in the local visitor economy. The de Bois review 11 and the 2022 Government response 12 established the Local Visitor Economy Partnership (LVEP) accreditation structure as the most likely conduit for that reinvestment at place level, though the Bill is not yet explicit on the LVEP-channelling question.