It is very common for a standard hotel room in Europe to have an occupancy limit of two or occasionally three people.
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Most hotels have specific occupancy limits for their rooms, which are determined by factors such as fire code regulations and the size of the room. If you have an extra person staying in the room without informing the hotel, you may be subject to additional charges.
In Italy you will have to provide all the passports, and they will register everyone. Most likely they won't let you check in and they will charge you fully, or they will give you another room and charge you more. Just book a room for 4 people. VERY STRICT!!!
Occupancy rate in hotels is an important KPI for hotel revenue management in order to understand how many of the available rooms are actually being used. Furthemore, knowing this number can help you better understand important information about your hotel.
For many hotels, an ideal occupancy rate is between 70% and 95% - though the sweet spot depends on the number of rooms, location, type of hotel, target guests, and more.
However, the trick to finding those suites is to search for four adults and four kids. Tip: If you do your own search, properties with rooms that sleep 7 and 8 will have “Room for 8” listed in the amenities.
A hotel cannot discriminate based on protected classes such as race, gender, or age. Other than that, there is a level of flexibility of when hotels can turn away people. It's a very common practice across the country for hotels to have limitations on local use of the hotels, he said.
Whether a family of 5 can stay in one hotel room largely depends on the hotel's policies and the size of the room. Most hotel rooms are designed to accommodate a maximum of 4 people, with two double or queen beds. However, some hotels may have larger rooms or suites that can accommodate larger groups.
Premier Inn's policy doesn't allow more than two adults to a room, so you will need to book two rooms or more if you have three or more adults in your party. At Premier Inn guests aged 16 years and above are classed as adults.
If you have a third person with you, your bill might shoot up by as much as half. The hotel may argue that the extra person is using the amenities—water, air conditioning, Wi-Fi, and room service that was originally meant for two, and the hotel is charging you for more water usage, electricity usage, etc.