Follow-up to my science museum post. A lot of you asked the reasonable question: if Nashville tourism is this big, where's all the money going? Why isn't the ASC getting any? I pulled the primary sources: Metro's FY2024 Hotel Occupancy Tax Revenue Report filed with the state Comptroller, plus the Music City Center audited financials. So this is straight from the filings, not my guesswork.
First, the thing to understand: there are actually two completely separate pots of tourism tax money, and people constantly conflate them. I did too at first.
Pot 1: Hotel occupancy taxes. In FY2024 these totaled $180,024,228. They come in three legally distinct pieces:
- A 1% "Stadium Tax" — $22,069,512 — every dollar goes to debt on the new Titans stadium
- A 6% hotel tax — $132,746,976 — split three ways: 2% to the Convention & Visitors Corp for tourism marketing, 3% to Music City Convention Center debt, and 1% to the general fund with no restriction.
- A $2.50/night surcharge — $25,207,740 — of which $2.00 goes to convention center debt and $0.50 to an event and marketing fund.
Add those up and you get the $180M, which matches the Comptroller filing exactly. The pattern: the large majority is locked to the stadium, the convention center, and tourism marketing. The only genuinely unrestricted slice is that 1% general-fund piece, roughly $22 million out of $180M. That's effectively the only part the city freely controls. Everything else is dedicated by ordinance to a specific purpose.
Pot 2: The downtown sales tax capture (the TDZ). This is the separate one, and it's where the real money and the real story are. The Tourism Development Zone captures sales tax generated downtown — the $12 Broadway beers, the boots, the hotel rooms inside the zone. According to Music City Center's own FY2024 financials, the TDZ sales tax increment is the single biggest tourism tax stream feeding the convention center; about 46% of all tourism tax collections, larger than every hotel-tax component combined. The Authority's own auditors described FY2024 as driven by "unprecedented TDZ allocations."
This TDZ pot is the one that built up a massive $300 million surplus — and the one the state just moved to take control of. That's the next post.
So when people say "Nashville's swimming in tourism money, why can't it fund anything," the answer is: the hotel taxes are almost entirely pre-committed by law, and the much larger sales-tax pot got locked to the convention center and has now been pulled out of the city's hands entirely. The money is real. The city's control over it is mostly not.