Staying in a hotel is definitely different than being at home. At home, you're the master of your castle. In a hotel, you never know how the management takes care of the rooms. And there's always the mystery behind what the previous guest might have been doing. Don't know about you, Pandas, but I, personally, try not to dwell on that too much, or I would probably never stay in a hotel again.
And some answers to this Redditor's question might make me do exactly that. The netizen Traditional_Dirt_788 asked: "What is an immediate red flag in hotels?" And the commenters came through with flying colors. People shared all kinds of disturbing stuff, from blood on the walls to bullet holes covered with tape.
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Your Uber driver asking “you sure?” as you pull ip to the hotel.
Read the google reviews before you book and see if the owners/managers respond kindly (if at all). If they attack the negative reviewers at all - stay away
This only applies to larger hotels:
When all employees are really young. Not a single employee over the age of 20-23 in view.
This in my experience means that who ever is managing the hotel is only hiring the cheapest possible employees, that generally don't know their rights. In every occasion like this, service has been completely absent.
Unless you stay at a training hotel of the major chains. But this is explained on the hotel website and during booking. It is cheaper, too. Here in the Netherlands we have hospitality schools, too, with a fully equipped hotel and different types of restaurant. All "employees" are way younger than 23. The piint is, to give them on-hands training in a realistic environment, with forgiving and helpful, but real, guests.
Cheap airlines, Airbnb, and the Internet made traveling much simpler and easier. Flights no longer cost an arm and a leg. Accommodation is also cheaper: NerdWallet found that Airbnb can be more cost-effective when traveling with a large group. And gone are the days when you needed a tour guide in the city.
TripAdvisor, travel blogs, YouTube, and even TikTok have heaps of advice on how to make the best out of any travel plans, even a day's trip. All you have to do is some browsing – people share these tips and tricks all over the Internet. Safety advice when staying in a hotel is no exception.
In their "10 Hotel Tips No One Taught You," The New York Times included some more tips about what to watch out for when staying in a hotel. First – don't assume that everything is squeaky clean. The remote, for starters, is a thing that definitely doesn't get cleaned as much as it should.
Little dark-brown spots near the top of the bed, below the mattress on in mattress seams. These mean bedbugs.
That's one thing you should always check first thing. And if you see signs, go back to the reception and tell them, because this is something a hotel will want to deal with asap. Doesn't matter how careful the hotel is, if the previous guest had bedbugs in their luggage, this can happen.
Overly aggressive air fresheners. If you get to the hotel and the room has a strong air freshener smell they are trying to mask bad smells like mold, sewage, or worse.
I worked at Booking (dot com) about a decade++ ago and our data scientists always said: "Avoid hotels with a rating lower than 8.3".
It was some kind of conclusive point of no return or something. They knew something that they couldn't share, but I've always applied this rule since that day, and I've never been disappointed. And I've traveled a LOOOOOT.
Red flag: rating lower than 8.3 on Booking.
Yeah I only once booked a hotel on booking.com that was an 8.0… BEDBUGS! Since then I only go for the 9+ ones unless I know the place. >.<
While we're on the topic of cleanliness, mind the drinking glasses. Supposedly, the hotel cleans them before every guest. Supposedly. However, if there is no on-site restaurant or kitchen, how exactly do they do that? By hand? How clean is it then? The author Geoffrey Morrison advises at least to rinse and sniff them.
The commenters already touched upon this next one. Yup, it's bed bugs. As a frequent traveler and hotel guest, he advises not to put your luggage on the bed for this very reason. Better keep it in the bathroom – as far from the bed as possible. Be sure to check the bed, sofa, or chair with a thorough look – even the fanciest of hotels can have a bed bug problem.
An easy red flag is when you’re looking a place over online and there are absolutely no photos of the exterior or street / neighborhood, just generic-looking photos of beds and the breakfast room.
This is true for restaurants as well, actually: check behind the toilet to see how well they clean there. It's a really great indicator for how they handle the cleanliness of other not-so-immediately-visible surfaces. If it's grungy, probably a lot of other things are neglected, too.
How can you recognize a bed bug infestation? You will be able to see adult bugs with the naked eye, and they are reddish brown in color. Other than live bugs, look for brownish-red spots on bedding and mattresses.
Dr. Jim Fredericks, a board-certified entomologist and senior vice president of public affairs at the National Pest Management Association (NPMA), told Forbes that signs of a bed bug infestation can include "small reddish brown to black fecal spots on mattresses, upholstery, or furniture, especially near cracks and crevices."
I went to a travelodge last month and when checking in someone came up to reception in front of us and we overheard “I don’t like to complain, but there is a used condom in our room”. Immediate red flag!
I’m not a frequent traveler, but I have worked in hotels for around 15 years, several of those years as a supervisor. I am also a travel agent in addition to my other job
When you go to a hotel, put your bags down in the bathroom on the tile. Do not just put your bags on the bed!!!!! Or the carpet. Or the couch. Stop it. **bathroom tile.**
Take your phone flashlight and inspect the following things:
* the mattress seam. Make sure you really, really look for any black/dark red spots
* The baseboard/headboard. Again, flashlight, look for any black or dark red spots.
* Check the couch for the same. Look under the cushion. Look at the back of the couch.
* anything else with a seam - check it. The curtain is an easy place to check since you can just walk right up to it. Check the bottom of the curtain - if you see any dirt, that’s a red flag.
Don’t just haphazardly look. Get up close. Don’t rely on the lamp in the room, or natural light in the room. You really do need to use the flashlight on your phone.
This takes around 5-10 minutes, but it’s worth it. A good sign is if the sheets and everything are stark white and there’s no marks, even better if there is a protective cover around the mattress.
Before you check in, call the hotel and tell them you have dust allergies and you will need the room deep cleaned with all new sheets, all new comforters. They will have to accommodate your request and they will have to have freshly cleaned everything.
Bring a tiny thing of dawn dish soap. If you’re going to use any cups etc in the room, you can clean it. If there are disposable cups in the room, there should be plastic on it.
Lastly, do not expect an early check in. Early check in means that the staff are going to scramble to get your room clean faster. Not only can this disrupt workflow, and stall other rooms being cleaned in time, but it can also lead to a haphazardly cleaned room. Know the check in time and plan accordingly.
I just want to stress that hotel rooms are not gross because the staff are lazy, or because the hotel isn’t nice. It’s not going to matter how much you paid to stay there - because the issue isn’t the hotel, the issue is other guests. They are trifling. They want their rooms cleaned right this second, and they bring bugs with them. Often times, the bugs are not anyone’s fault, you never know when someone picked up bedbugs in their suitcase while they are at the airport. To avoid problems, check the room for black/dark red spots, and do not contribute to the problem of rushing hotel staff.
When you leave, put all your clothes in a plastic bag, and tie it. You want it closed. When you get home, dump it directly into a washing machine.
Or has brought home bedbugs as an accidental souvenir. Not something to play with and there's been infestations in many places lately
Load More Replies...Good to know from an expert how to check for bedbugs. Those things are horrendous to get rid of - prevention is better than cure.
This is sound advice! Bedbugs are on the rise everywhere and you don't want to bring them home.
As a frequent traveler - I don't care if you stay in $40/night room or $4k a night - do these things!!
i really wonder if my travelodges are going the extra mile when i tell them i have allergies
My word..... So much hassle with my phone and the flashlight before I even get to sit down. And to think some people sleep rough.
The clothes should go straight into the dryer, otherwise the clothing might not get hot enough to kill the bugs, you can't try to starve them out, they've been recorded as surviving nearly 2 years without feeding.
I get it, but I can't ever put my luggage in a bathroom I haven't cleaned myself. My own quirk
It’s only for a few minutes. Set your luggage on a towel from home if you must, just don’t use hotel linens until you’ve inspected them. Another option is leave your luggage in the car until you’ve completed this inspection. And remember, this isn’t just about cleanliness. Because even the cleanest of places can be infested with bed bugs from a previous visitor.
Load More Replies...Wow. You really have a issue. Didnt mention wearing a foil hat though
No, this is experience. I was once eaten alive by bedbugs in a hotel, more than 150 bites. Discovered that I was allergic to them. I cried, even though I was given cortisone. I cried. The hotel reacted in the best way, paying for everything I needed, calling immediately the insect exterminator, putting my stuff in the freezer and helping me avoiding infesting my home. Now I check thoroughly wherever I am.
Load More Replies...This next one probably sounds like common sense to some. But there are people who feel strangely safe in hotels. For what reason, I personally will never know. Locking your door and putting the 'Do Not Disturb' sign can save you from unwanted guests, but it's also a good way to let housekeeping know you don't wish to wake up in the early hours of the day.
Bloodstains on the wall. They tried to get rid of bed bugs, failed, so previous guests were smashing them by hand. They did not bother clean the wall.
Did a job up in Blythe (UK) a while ago. We asked the customer where to stay and their nearest recommendation was about 20 miles away. We said "really?" and they said "yes, really." A guy from another company also working on the project stayed in a hotel in Newcastle. He collected his key and went to his room to find the door had been kicked off the hinges. He called reception and told them this. They misheard (to be fair he was from somewhere near Fort William) and said, "Oh, can't you make the key work?" "No, the door is lying in the middle of the room and the hinges have been torn off the wall." "Oh, no worries, come back down and we'll give you another room." Like this was perfectly normal.
When the Uber driver looks at my girlfriend and I and asks if we'll be OK.
Happened to us in St Louis. We didn't even stay for 10 minutes before getting the hell out.
Oh sweetie. Bet it was East St. Louis. Ten minutes was still too long. You were lucky. Especially if you were stopped for a minute. I live in a nice area near Forest Park, but you can still hear the gun shots.
Morrison's last piece of advice is to consider staying in a hostel. As a former solo traveler, I very much endorse this idea. It's not as bad as people make it out to be. It is a great way to meet new people and fellow travelers. (Remember to be safe and don't tell people if you're traveling by yourself.) As long as you have a pair of earplugs and a trusty padlock, a hostel can be a great place to stay.
I have a good one: front desk (or someone with access to it) stole my credit card details less than 1 hour after checking in.
Housekeeping in New Orleans stole a check from my daughter, filled it out for $350 and cashed it, with signature and drivers license number, and the NO police refused to even look into it!! I had to cover her rent that month. Still pissed off about it 20+ years later.
Stayed at a hostel in Granada Spain one time that in their description on some hostel website said '420 friendly, bring your iPod, and no fat people'.
We were so curious that we went anyway, and apparently it was because the building was so old the doors, stairways, and shower just couldnt accomodate larger set people that had come in the past.
It was actually a cool hostel, although weird at the same time. Lots of stories about that place.
The smell of poor ventilation, the moment you enter the hotel.
In thousands of hotel nights I only once checked into a hotel where I was asked at the front desk to leave a cash deposit to be issued a TV remote control. I figured that was not a good sign and it turned out I was right.
Door that won't lock properly.
This is usually the first thing I check. Make sure it can lock.
I’m ambassador for Marriott, travel probably more than everyone here
The only thing that is 1-1 and is true every time is the smell. Like if the lobby/hallway smells like a*s/mildew/bad, 100% chance the room is a*s too
If the room smells like a gas leak. I had a hotel room that was the “last one available” while passing through a different state. I opened the door and could smell the gas. The heater was also set to over 80 degrees. The room just felt like a swamp. I laid down on the bed and instantly began to feel sleepy. I wasn’t sleepy before entering that room. I just could not stay there with that smell. I checked out immediately and asked for a refund. Being female and traveling alone, the manager hassled me over refunding my money. He was foreign with a heavy Indian accent and asked me where my husband was. I reminded him that I checked in alone, and was traveling alone. He asked to speak to with whomever I was staying. I explained again that I was staying alone. I had to threaten to call the fire department about the gas leak before he would refund my money.
When the wall ac unit is making horrible noise and you pull the filter and it has so much dirt and hair on it that it looks like a cat died in there.
Mold and mildew smell.
This one depends. I find whenever I go to Mexico, Cuba, Dominican Republic, etc., the rooms often smell mildewy due to the constant humidity and AC consistently running, which means closed windows
When you walk into the reception for the first time and a man is shouting “THIS IS THE WORST F*****G HOTEL I’VE EVER STAYED IN!” before storming out.
I checked into a hostel in Marrakesh and at the same time a guest came in to complain to the guy that their gold chain was stolen while they were in the shower.
I used to travel internationally A LOT for work, so I have quite a few hotel horror stories.
Anyway, the most immediate red flag was when I checked in and asked what time breakfast was served:
"Breakfast starts at 9am"
"9am? That's pretty late. I have meetings in town before then."
"Oh, do you want it now?"
It was around 8pm at the time. It didn't get any better from there. There were hookers in the lobby and the bed smelled so bad that I slept on a hard wooden chair.
Yea condom, lube, and sex toys vending machine and very friendly ladies hanging round the main entrance.
No wifi. It's 2024, wifi should be present in any hotel and free for those staying at the hotel. I don't get why I need to pay for 24 hours.
Depends on country and region. Even in the western world you can encounter rural regiobs where wifi is a trouble, not only for guests but the entire village. The cosy hamlet you chose for your zen-holiday might not yet have been connected to high-speed cabling. In most western Europe countries the cables are dug in, 1m at least. This is expensive and takes time, if the main cable is 20 km further away, behind a mountain.
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Worst I've ever had isn't mentioned above. Drunk people and paper thin walls. If you can hear the complete word for word conversation in the room next door, go elsewhere.
Ahh, most of these seem quite tame. For a good laugh, have a look at the reviews of this hotel in Slough, never fails to make me laugh as I know where it is. Absolutely horrendous. I believe its closed now as no 1 star or any posts since 2019. https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Hotel_Review-g190742-d455777-Reviews-Skyways_Hotel-Slough_Berkshire_England.html Review-65b...6a0857.png
Some of these are useful, but most of them you're not going to see until you're already out the money, and most of us can't go throwing money around for hotel rooms, so...
I was meeting my cousin in Miami because we were seeing an NFL game. I gave the driver the hotel name and address and he said " I thought they closed that place down".. Red Flag #1.. I get to the hotel, looks ok but not the greatest part of town but walk in and there are 2 people having a screaming match. They were both employees of the hotel.. Red Flag number #2. I get to my room and wanted to have a shower after a long day of travelling but there are no towels. I call down to the desk and ask for a towel and another screaming match starts between the workers and I hang up. Wait for about 15 minutes, still no towel so I decide to go downstairs and ask in person and as I open the door a plastic bag is hanging on my doorknob with a towel in it. No knock, no customer service. I think they closed that place down after ;)
I've stayed in good hotels and bad hotels. Expensive ones and cheap ones. There is no correlation between those. I've stayed in a Motel while traveling every week to a client site, and the manager knew my name and held my stuff while I was going to be gone for a few weeks. I've stayed in Holiday Inn Express level places where I asked if they would have a room for me if the storm cancelled my flight. The reply was from the manager, who I never met and overheard the question, turned around and said, "We will always have a room for you, Mr. Seiden." I've stayed in hotels that were very expensive, supposedly high end, in prime locations (literally across the street from Madison Square Garden) that had crappy TVs that were so old they had CRT tubes and were so bad that I couldn't watch the Rangers' game going on across the street, but they did have mice and gave me one in my room for free.
Find out their "deposit" policy. A local chain had a $130 room. They put a hold on my card day of check in for that amount. Then they charged a $100 deposit hold on my card. The next day, solidly charged the room with tax, and told me 7-10 days for the hold and deposit to fall off effectively tying up nearly $400 for a $130 room. When I called, they refused to drop the holds. I had to go to my bank to get the $$ released.
I booked a room in a hotel once while travelling for work in Netherlands. The guy at the check-in asked me 2 times if I really wanted to stay. I confirmed. Turned out it was a workers' hotel+pub with terrible conditions and no toilet in the room. Common toilets and showers in the corridor. When I decided to leave the guy in the check-in seemed happy to see us go. My next choice was 3 bedrooms + living rooom + kitchenette in... a windmil - a most wonderful place
My husband recently had a business trip where they were staying at an old but "remodeled" hotel. Turned out that only the lobby and meeting rooms had been remodeled. The wing with the rooms was creepy with uneven floors, some lights out, other lights flickering, old creaky metal bed frames, mattresses that were obviously sagging heavily even before getting into bed, carpet worn completely to the floor in places, etc.
In my early 20s, I was traveling across country with my FIL. I was moving to where my husband was in tech school for the Air Force, and I was driving my car, while my FIL drove my husband's truck. We were on our last leg and should have made it that day but a massive storm was rolling toward us and we decided to stop for the night, at the next available stop. There were two different nightly rates. One was in one building, the other in a different. The receptionist explained that the higher rate, $5 more, got you a room with a remote for the tv. My FIL decided he didn't want to spend the extra $. It didn't matter, the place was a mess. Filthy carpet, old tv, cigarette burns in the comforters. There was graffiti on the walls, the toilet flushed super slow, the sink and tub backed up and then would slowly drain. He ran out to grab dinner for us, and I sat and cried. It was so gross. I couldn't shower after a day of driving, and I slept on top of my bed and still felt gross.
And now I'm a complete hotel snob. I will pony up extra money to stay somewhere nice. If it says motel, there is no way. I'm super picky. Stayed in Anaheim several years ago. Booked a room at a hotel chain that we'd typically been happy with. Arrived at this one and it was not good. Checked out same day and booked at a different place across the street. If I can't relax, I'm not staying.
Load More Replies...Worst I've ever had isn't mentioned above. Drunk people and paper thin walls. If you can hear the complete word for word conversation in the room next door, go elsewhere.
Ahh, most of these seem quite tame. For a good laugh, have a look at the reviews of this hotel in Slough, never fails to make me laugh as I know where it is. Absolutely horrendous. I believe its closed now as no 1 star or any posts since 2019. https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Hotel_Review-g190742-d455777-Reviews-Skyways_Hotel-Slough_Berkshire_England.html Review-65b...6a0857.png
Some of these are useful, but most of them you're not going to see until you're already out the money, and most of us can't go throwing money around for hotel rooms, so...
I was meeting my cousin in Miami because we were seeing an NFL game. I gave the driver the hotel name and address and he said " I thought they closed that place down".. Red Flag #1.. I get to the hotel, looks ok but not the greatest part of town but walk in and there are 2 people having a screaming match. They were both employees of the hotel.. Red Flag number #2. I get to my room and wanted to have a shower after a long day of travelling but there are no towels. I call down to the desk and ask for a towel and another screaming match starts between the workers and I hang up. Wait for about 15 minutes, still no towel so I decide to go downstairs and ask in person and as I open the door a plastic bag is hanging on my doorknob with a towel in it. No knock, no customer service. I think they closed that place down after ;)
I've stayed in good hotels and bad hotels. Expensive ones and cheap ones. There is no correlation between those. I've stayed in a Motel while traveling every week to a client site, and the manager knew my name and held my stuff while I was going to be gone for a few weeks. I've stayed in Holiday Inn Express level places where I asked if they would have a room for me if the storm cancelled my flight. The reply was from the manager, who I never met and overheard the question, turned around and said, "We will always have a room for you, Mr. Seiden." I've stayed in hotels that were very expensive, supposedly high end, in prime locations (literally across the street from Madison Square Garden) that had crappy TVs that were so old they had CRT tubes and were so bad that I couldn't watch the Rangers' game going on across the street, but they did have mice and gave me one in my room for free.
Find out their "deposit" policy. A local chain had a $130 room. They put a hold on my card day of check in for that amount. Then they charged a $100 deposit hold on my card. The next day, solidly charged the room with tax, and told me 7-10 days for the hold and deposit to fall off effectively tying up nearly $400 for a $130 room. When I called, they refused to drop the holds. I had to go to my bank to get the $$ released.
I booked a room in a hotel once while travelling for work in Netherlands. The guy at the check-in asked me 2 times if I really wanted to stay. I confirmed. Turned out it was a workers' hotel+pub with terrible conditions and no toilet in the room. Common toilets and showers in the corridor. When I decided to leave the guy in the check-in seemed happy to see us go. My next choice was 3 bedrooms + living rooom + kitchenette in... a windmil - a most wonderful place
My husband recently had a business trip where they were staying at an old but "remodeled" hotel. Turned out that only the lobby and meeting rooms had been remodeled. The wing with the rooms was creepy with uneven floors, some lights out, other lights flickering, old creaky metal bed frames, mattresses that were obviously sagging heavily even before getting into bed, carpet worn completely to the floor in places, etc.
In my early 20s, I was traveling across country with my FIL. I was moving to where my husband was in tech school for the Air Force, and I was driving my car, while my FIL drove my husband's truck. We were on our last leg and should have made it that day but a massive storm was rolling toward us and we decided to stop for the night, at the next available stop. There were two different nightly rates. One was in one building, the other in a different. The receptionist explained that the higher rate, $5 more, got you a room with a remote for the tv. My FIL decided he didn't want to spend the extra $. It didn't matter, the place was a mess. Filthy carpet, old tv, cigarette burns in the comforters. There was graffiti on the walls, the toilet flushed super slow, the sink and tub backed up and then would slowly drain. He ran out to grab dinner for us, and I sat and cried. It was so gross. I couldn't shower after a day of driving, and I slept on top of my bed and still felt gross.
And now I'm a complete hotel snob. I will pony up extra money to stay somewhere nice. If it says motel, there is no way. I'm super picky. Stayed in Anaheim several years ago. Booked a room at a hotel chain that we'd typically been happy with. Arrived at this one and it was not good. Checked out same day and booked at a different place across the street. If I can't relax, I'm not staying.
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