Hospitality in Maine

Maine Hospitality Intel

Monday, May 25, 2026
2 min read
5 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on hospitality developments in Maine. Today we're covering 5 key stories including updates on maine hospitality headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Maine Hospitality Headlines

2 stories

1.1

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Why It Matters

Sources:Source
1.2

MGFPA Licensing Checklist Helps ME Food Businesses Stay Compliant.

The Maine Grocers and Food Producers Association provides a systematic licensing requirements checklist for businesses growing, producing, processing, manufacturing, distributing, or selling food in ME.

Why It Matters

ME hospitality professionals who source, prepare, or serve food can use this resource to verify their suppliers' compliance and understand their own permitting obligations.

Sources:Source
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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Why your POS-vendor's PCI compliance is not your PCI compliance.

The merchant — the restaurant or hotel — remains responsible for PCI compliance regardless of the POS vendor's certifications. Vendor compliance covers the software; merchant responsibility covers network segmentation, employee access, and incident response. "We use a PCI-compliant POS" is not an audit response.

Why It Matters

Card-brand fines after a breach apply to the merchant, not the vendor. Self-assessment questionnaires are required annually and are reviewed by acquiring banks.

2.2

When no-show deposits become consumer-protection violations.

Charging a no-show fee is permitted; the boundary cases are (1) failure to disclose the fee at booking time clearly, (2) charging more than the posted fee, and (3) charging after a same-day cancellation that is allowed under the posted policy. Each becomes a consumer-protection complaint when the booking confirmation does not match the charge.

Why It Matters

State consumer-protection bureaus pursue patterns of small undisclosed charges aggressively because each affected guest is a potential complainant.

2.3

Marketplace platforms collect occupancy tax differently across cities.

Short-term rental platforms collect and remit local occupancy tax in some jurisdictions and not others — the same platform may handle it for one city and not the next over. Hosts who assume the platform handles all tax obligations frequently owe state or local tax that was never withheld.

Why It Matters

Tax authorities are increasingly using platform data to identify hosts; back-tax assessments in this category routinely run multi-year and include penalties.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 25, 2026
Stories5
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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