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1. Air-conditioning: This is just
sneaky. Of course you’re going to pony up for air-conditioning on a hot day —
no one wants to try to sleep in the sweltering heat. But once you’ve checked
into your room and you’re drenched in sweat from lugging your bags in the hot
sun, finding out it’s going to cost you to cool down is seriously
cringe-inducing. Watch out for this at the Samsara Cliff
Resort & Spa in Negril, Jamaica.
2. Mini-fridges: At the GHT Oasis Park
and Spa in Lloret de Mar, Spain, guests must pay extra to use their
mini-fridges. Have some leftovers you want later and trying to avoid food
poisoning? That’ll be about four euros a day, please. Or a tummy ache — your
choice.
3. Safes: This just
feels wrong to us. You shouldn’t have to pay extra money to protect your items
from theft on vacation — in your own room! Though this seems especially common
in European hotels, we’ve seen this around the world — at the Michelangelo
Hotel on the Amalfi Coast (it’s a whopping 10 euros here), VIK Arena Blanca
in the D.R, and Bally’s in Las
Vegas, just to name a few.
4. Clean Pool Towels: if the hotel
has a pool, one can assume the guests are going to need clean towels to
dry off. So why not charge for them? That’s what they decided to do at Hotel Playadulce
in Aguadulce, Spain. Pool towels are advertised as free, but in
fact you have to put down a deposit to use them, and then pay to swap them for
clean ones. Better be willing to hold on to your damp, smelly towel if you’re
on a budget.
5. Electricity: Who would have
thought that you’d have to pay extra to turn the lights on? This is not
the 19th century, people. We’re personally not fans of showering in the dark,
ourselves. At Morritt’s
Tortuga Club & Resort in Grand Cayman, each room has its own
electricity meter, and guests have to pay for exactly what they use during
their stay!
6. Linens: Staying at an
apartment-style property might mean sacrificing a few typical
hotel features — like a pool, sure. Daily housekeeping, OK — we can make
do with weekly. But it should never, ever mean sacrificing sheets and bath
towels. The apartments at the Residence
Rivamare Ugento come with them, but if you want to actually use them
— and we assume you don’t want to sleep on a bare mattress, or air dry in the
shower — you may have to pay extra for the privilege, here.
7. Toilet Paper: Free toilet
paper in a hotel room that you’ve paid for should be a basic human
right. But at some hotels in Brazil, like the King Albergue Hostel in Rio de Janeiro,
you’ll have to cough up a few bucks to wipe your derriere. And no, we’re not
kidding.
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