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Can you permanently stay at a hotel?

Yes, you can permanently stay at a hotel, but it's often more expensive than traditional renting. Hotels may have policies limiting long stays, and local laws can affect this too. Hotels usually provide less space and fewer amenities than a home.



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Typically, if you stay beyond the check-out time without notifying the hotel in advance, you could be considered an overstayer. In such cases, the hotel may charge you an additional fee for the extended stay.

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If you stay more than 30 days in the same room, you are considered to be tenant and the hotel your landlord. Legally, the hotel will be put into a different tax class if this happens. So they don't have to pay extra in taxes, the stay is limited by the hotel to 30 days.

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Minimum stay is a policy, or restriction, that you can set at your property which dictates how guests can book their reservation. For example, if you set a minimum stay of two nights, no guest will be able to book a stay shorter than that.

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Once a family purchased a motel, they would live there, and the family members would do all the tasks needed to run it, from cleaning rooms to checking in guests. That helped keep costs down, and profits went toward acquiring new motels. By the 1980s Gujaratis had come to dominate the industry.

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If you're looking for the quick answer: Yes, many hotels do offer discounts for longer stays (stays of 5 nights or longer) ranging from 5% up to 50% off standard rates. However, long stay discounts are not guaranteed and vary considerably by hotel, season, room type and length of stay.

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Extending your hotel stay can sometimes come with a higher price tag. Hotels often charge a higher rate for additional nights, especially if they are in high demand. However, there are a few strategies you can employ to mitigate these higher costs.

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Generally a hotel or motel can force a guest to leave if the hotel or motel guest does not pay for the room or breaks the hotel or motel rules. However, if you have stayed in the hotel or motel long enough to become a tenant, you cannot be put out unless the motel or hotel files an eviction case against you.

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Assuming the hotel, state, region, or country doesn't have any restrictions, you could theoretically live at a hotel for as long as you want (or as long as you can afford to do so). However, some hotels do place limits on how long you can stay.

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Hotel investors can benefit enormously from their investment due to the possibility of high returns, the opportunity to capitalize on favorable tax rules, and the ability to diversify a property portfolio.

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Usually minimum night stay requirements are just the sales strategy of the particular hotel. Perhaps Fri is a very busy night but Sat isn't looking as great reservations-wise so the hotel imposes a 2 night minimum to built business on Sat.

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For example, if Friday has Minimum Nights on Arrival set to 2, then someone who tries to book a room for a Friday check-in must stay at least two nights: Friday and Saturday night. If Saturday is already reserved for that room, it would be impossible for the guest to stay the required two nights.

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