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5 things you should avoid using (or clean yourself) in a hotel room

Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:23 am
Posted by Will Cover
St. Louis, MO
Member since Mar 2007
38596 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:23 am
quote:

Housekeepers are typically expected to clean 15 to 20 rooms during their eight-hour shift, so if you break that down, that only gives them about 20–30minutes per room at best. Within that time, they’re cleaning the room, making the beds, replacing linens and towels, restocking amenities, taking out the garbage, organizing, and more. With so much to do—and so little time—a lot can figuratively (and literally) swept under the rug.



quote:

3. Blankets and duvets
This may be hard to avoid, especially during a cold season, but Richardson warns in most hotels, blankets, and duvets are very rarely cleaned and changed out. “Where I worked, unless there was a visible stain, blankets, duvets, and bedspreads were only taken down to laundry once a year.” She adds that it’s only during the annual deep clean that “extras” were taken care of like mattress and pillow protectors replaced, mattresses flipped or walls and curtains washed.


The Remaining 4
Posted by LSU Grad Alabama Fan
369 Cardboard Box Lane
Member since Nov 2019
10325 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:34 am to
quote:


The Remaining 4


Can you just post the 4 and let me click the link if I want to read the additional info?
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
119487 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:38 am to
I take a small bottle and wipe stuff down. Do not use the coffee maker or glasses. I think most people are that way in a hotel room.
Posted by MrWhipple
West of the Mississippi
Member since Jun 2016
703 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:38 am to
I always use the hotel ice bucket as a water bowl for my dog. I’m sure it gets sanitized after each stay.
Posted by GetBackToWork
Member since Dec 2007
6262 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:39 am to
quote:

Can you just post the 4 and let me click the link if I want to read the additional info?




You won’t believe Number 3
Posted by Y.A. Tittle
Member since Sep 2003
101662 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:39 am to
I can’t imagine being so OCD as to worry about stuff like this.
Posted by Lakefront-Tiger
Da Lakefront
Member since Nov 2004
5921 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:41 am to
Coffee maker
ice buckets
towels
glassware

There, I've done my good deed for the day.
Posted by theunknownknight
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2005
57437 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:42 am to
So basically you should not touch anything in your room
Posted by 3deadtrolls
lafayette
Member since Jan 2014
5737 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:44 am to
2. Ice buckets

You may be thinking with a plastic liner, the ice bucket should be fine. Well according to Richardson, just because you’re using the liner, it doesn’t mean everyone is. “I’ve personally seen ice buckets used as dog dishes, puke buckets, etc., and generally, the buckets are only superficially cleaned,” she says. “The water or ice is dumped, and then it’s just a quick dry with your dusting rag and maybe a spray with whatever all-purpose cleaner the hotel provides housekeeping staff with.”
3. Blankets and duvets

This may be hard to avoid, especially during a cold season, but Richardson warns in most hotels, blankets, and duvets are very rarely cleaned and changed out. “Where I worked, unless there was a visible stain, blankets, duvets, and bedspreads were only taken down to laundry once a year.” She adds that it’s only during the annual deep clean that “extras” were taken care of like mattress and pillow protectors replaced, mattresses flipped or walls and curtains washed.
4. Towels and robes

“We were always told not to replace them if they looked clean to prevent them from getting overwashed, and so the laundry doesn’t get overwhelmed,” shares Richardson. Knowing what she knows now, she suggests finding the housekeeper on your floor and asking for fresh towels and robes off of the cart as those are clean.
5. Glassware

“Where I worked, drinking glasses and coffee cups were simply rinsed and wiped in the bathroom sink,” says Richardson. “We were not given dish soap nor was the glassware collected and taken to be properly washed in a dishwasher.”

Whether it’s for business or leisure, next time you stay in a hotel, Richardson suggests packing a few cleaning products in your luggage. “I always bring some disinfectant wipes with me and give anything I’ll be using in the room a quick wipe—light switches, remotes, phones, table tops, and doorknobs especially,” she says. Lisa Rinna would be proud.
Posted by pankReb
Defending National Champs Fan
Member since Mar 2009
64689 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:48 am to
this is why I bust load on everything in the hotel room. Helps make sure everything gets thoroughly cleaned.


You're welcome everyone.
Posted by armsdealer
Member since Feb 2016
11528 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:49 am to
The world is a disgusting place.
Posted by Sun God
Member since Jul 2009
44874 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:54 am to
quote:

I take a small bottle and wipe stuff down. Do not use the coffee maker or glasses. I think most people are that way in a hotel room.

Most people treat hotel rooms like shite since they aren’t responsible for most of the clean up

Liquor sanitizes the glasses right
Posted by toesinthesand
One Particular Harbour
Member since Dec 2011
182 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:55 am to
Posted by Sun God
Member since Jul 2009
44874 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:56 am to
I hope it’s urine
Posted by elprez00
Hammond, LA
Member since Sep 2011
29419 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:56 am to
quote:

towels

Just about every hotel I’ve stayed at has towels that smell like they were washed in pure bleach and dried with an industrial steam cleaner.

Of all the things I feel like aren’t a problem, this is pretty high up there.
Posted by LSU Grad Alabama Fan
369 Cardboard Box Lane
Member since Nov 2019
10325 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:58 am to
quote:

this is why I bust load on everything in the hotel room. Helps make sure everything gets thoroughly cleaned.


You're welcome everyone.


I always wondered why my fingers tasted so salty after reading the Gideons Bible.
Posted by Clark W Griswold
THE USA
Member since Sep 2012
10512 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 8:59 am to
I ve used ice buckets to throw up in and clean turds out of a stopped up toilet. Never use it.
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
20514 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 9:04 am to
quote:

The world is a disgusting place.


No, humans are just pussies when it comes to sanitation.

Animals lick themselves clean.

This idea that everything needs to be hyper clean is absurd. Some amount of germs are actually perfectly healthy. People pretty much want things to appear like it’s their private place and no one else uses it, that’s an absurd standard.
Posted by SippyCup
Gulf Coast
Member since Sep 2008
6145 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 9:07 am to
quote:

Blankets and duvets This may be hard to avoid, especially during a cold season, but Richardson warns in most hotels, blankets, and duvets are very rarely cleaned and changed out. “Where I worked, unless there was a visible stain, blankets, duvets, and bedspreads were only taken down to laundry once a year.”


I’m not sure what type of hotels these apply to but everyone I stay in removes the duvet and replaces them with a new one after each check out. Most higher end hotels have gone to the all white duvet to make cleaning easier. All white duvets show everything so they have to be cleaned regularly.
Posted by Willie Stroker
Member since Sep 2008
12975 posts
Posted on 2/19/23 at 9:27 am to
quote:

The world is a disgusting place.

And to think how much cleaner these hotel rooms are now than at any previous point in history.

Those motels you stayed at during family road trips as a kid…if only you had a black light.
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