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Are hotel robes clean?

Your hotel guests will wear their bathrobes for several purposes. Whether visitors use their bathrobes to lounge in their rooms or after a swim at the hotel pool, each one of your hotel bathrobes will have to be washed regularly to meet the high standards of the hospitality industry.



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Do hotels keep track of robes? THEY KNOW. According to a Miami-based company called Linen Tracking Technology, a lot of hotels stitch tiny microchips into their towels, robes, pillowcases, cloth napkins and other linens. The LinenTracker chips are currently being used in over 2,000 hotels--but don't ask which ones.

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Taking toiletries such as toilet paper and hand soap isn't exactly allowed. The main reason why hotels would like guests to leave their toiletries behind is to make sure that their staff wasn't slacking off on that particular room.

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It's considered stealing Hotel robes are provided for guests to use during their stay, not to take home with them. Even if you think that the robe is a complimentary gift, it's not. The hotel has provided the robe for your use during your stay, and taking it without permission is considered theft.

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Fortunately, hidden cameras in hotel rooms are extremely rare. But if you want to take precautions, a visual inspection and using detection tools can help identify any secret recording devices.

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Towels are the most common item stolen from hotel rooms, and you can understand why. Most hotels provide incredibly soft, luxurious and comforting towels that just feel so good wrapped around your body.

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There are hotels that may offer complimentary items including robes. Technically yes. But most of the time they will simply charge you for the robe to the credit card on file. Depending on the hotel and your membership status, if you ask the manager for one they will give it to you.

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They provide classy touches that make you appreciate a hotel room, even more, making it seem more than just a place to rest your head. So by offering your customers a complimentary robe, they will fall in love with your hotel even quicker, able to feel at home wrapped in the embrace of a cosy bathrobe.

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Add avoiding rooms on the first and second floor to your hotel safety checklist, as these are the areas most prone to crime. Rooms on the 3rd-6th floors are ideal. Not only is there typically less crime on these floors, but in the event of an emergency, you can quickly get downstairs and evacuate the building.

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If your privacy was invaded by a hidden camera, you may be able to file a hidden camera lawsuit. The most frequent legal theories used in these cases are based upon: The legal theory of negligence; Negligent infliction of emotional distress.

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Although e-cigarettes and weed pens do not emit the same amount or type of smoke as regular cigarettes, they can still easily be detected in hotels. How? Well, the answer is simple- smoke and vape detectors.

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What You Cannot Take From a Hotel Room. Guests often take towels, irons, hairdryers, pillows, and blankets, according to the housekeeping department at Hilton Kingston. Cable boxes, clock radios, paintings, ashtrays, light bulbs, TV remote controls—even the Bible—are commonly stolen as well.

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Hotels keep a record of guests who trash hotel rooms or steal items, and they might ban those people from booking rooms again. In rare scenarios, some people could get arrested.

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Yes, hotels keep track of their towels. They count the amount of towels that are left in the room. Some hotels also have barcodes they can scan.

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Hotels want to give their guests the confidence that the bathroom has been cleaned since the last guest has used the room. To accomplish this, the maid will fold over the last piece of toilet paper to assure that no one has used the toilet paper since the room was cleaned.

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