Should I not use double things in a double room if I have booked it as a single guest?

Should I not use double things in a double room if I have booked it as a single guest? - White sinks placed on wooden cabinet in contemporary illuminated bathroom

Some hotels physically don't have single rooms even if they can be booked so. The towels, soap, shampoo and so on are always for two guests. I'm not a wasteful person, but I wonder if I'm allowed to use everything in the room.

I guess, hotels don't care about that matter too much, however it is ethically important to me.

P.S. I'm mostly interested in 3 or 4-star hotels.



Best Answer

YES, feel free to use all the in-room amenities as you please.

Be aware though that all rooms are provisioned the same regardless of how many occupants are expected, single being the hard exception.

Meaning, housekeeping rarely knows how many people will eventually occupy the room so often you will find 4 person rooms also provisioned for 2.

If larger parties require more items, they will be provided without question.




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Should I not use double things in a double room if I have booked it as a single guest? - Interior of modern colorful master bathroom with shower cabin and tub in front of double sink cabinet with mirrors in daylight
Should I not use double things in a double room if I have booked it as a single guest? - Interior of bathroom with colorful wall
Should I not use double things in a double room if I have booked it as a single guest? - Photo Of Bed Near Window



Can I book a double room for one person?

Yes you can. The person booking the room only uses one name.

What does double room mean when booking a hotel?

Double room: double rooms are assigned to two people; expect one double bed, or two twin beds depending on the hotel. Triple room: as the name might suggest, this room is equipped for three people to stay. The room will have a combination of either three twin beds, one double bed and a twin, or two double beds.

What does double room for single use mean?

Most rooms has two beds together to be used for one person ("double single use room") or for two people. Rates are the same for one or two people so you can share room with your wife.

Can two people sleep in a single room at a hotel?

Yes it can,depends the type of room you are choosing. if you are going for a twin sharing room then there will be 2 separate single beds in the room to accommodate 2 people.



See Which Hotels Were Caught Not Changing Bedsheets for New Guests




More answers regarding should I not use double things in a double room if I have booked it as a single guest?

Answer 2

Use what is necessary if it is available within the price of your booking.

If you start going that way there are many more things to worry about. Should you use half of the room and not step in the other half? No you paid for the whole room and everything that comes included within that price is morally and practically fine to use. Most of those things will get thrown to bin anyway, why let them go waste if you can use them?

They aren’t charging you half price of that room because you are single and the room is twin. So use what you paid for without feeling guilty.

The argument in comments on this answer is assuming that the customer always knows what % of the room price they are paying. That's flawed. Customer doesn't know and shouldn't care what % of the cost are they paying for the bigger room. They are paying what was asked for by the hotel and that's that. I'm paying 100% of the cost. Its none of my business if it costs the hotel more than that. They get what they ask for.

If you someday get a free (or for a nominal cost) flight seat upgrade from economy to business class should you refuse it because you didn't pay for it as much as other people did? Nope

Answer 3

In general you are free to use all the amenities in the room, as, for example, the linen on both beds will be changed when you check out whether you slept in one or both.

This is not universally true -- I once stayed with a friend at a budget accommodation somewhere in Europe where we were told we would be charged extra if we used both beds in the room.

As for things like soap and shampoo, they are yours to use. Balding men pay the same room rate as long-haired people who need two or three bottles of shampoo to properly clean their hair. (In fact, I have never had a hotel or motel refuse my request for extra shampoo.)

(Source: personal experience. Posting to share the story of the hotel room where my friend and I were told to share the double bed or pay extra.)

Answer 4

You posed this as an ethical question, and while you've gotten really good answers about circumstance, no one's addressed the ethical aspects of the question, so I will here.

You ask if it is ethical to use the consumable items provided.

My answer would be yes, it is - you should use what you need, and no more. Don't waste them, but don't avoid using them out of some sense of ethicality. If you need to open that second bottle of shampoo on your first day, feel free, if you require it. But don't waste the resources unnecessarily. (The more quickly you use them, the more quickly they need to be replenished, which unnecessarily costs the hotel money.)

The top post in this thread discusses how hotels often discard all consumables after a room is vacated - I had never contemplated this before. If this is the case, ethically, we should take consumables with us, if we'll use them or can find a use for them, so that perfectly usable products aren't discarded. (Maybe it's the Scot in me via my ancestors, but I put my partially used soaps back in their wrappers, bring them home, and finish them off in my own shower. Then again, I'm the type that sticks the remainder of my old soap to the new one, so I'm not wasting any of it.)

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