This calculator reveals the true cost of a Nashville hotel stay by adding the city’s layered lodging taxes to the advertised room rate. Nashville stacks a combined sales tax, an occupancy privilege tax, and a flat per-night fee.
How it works
The tool applies the percentage taxes to the room rate and adds the flat nightly fee, then multiplies by the number of nights:
sales tax = rate × (salesPct / 100) (about 9.25%)
occ tax = rate × (occPct / 100) (about 6%)
per-night = rate + sales tax + occ tax + flat fee
stay total = per-night × nights
The percentage taxes total roughly 15.25%, and the flat fee — a few dollars per night funding tourism and the convention center — pushes the effective rate to about 17 to 18% on typical room prices.
Example and notes
A 200 dollar room incurs about 18.50 in sales tax, 12.00 in occupancy tax, and a 2.50 flat fee, for a per-night total near 233 dollars. Over three nights that is roughly 699 dollars instead of the 600 advertised. The flat fee hits cheap rooms harder as a percentage, and any resort or facility fee a hotel sets is extra — add it to the room rate, since it is usually taxable too.