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Do hotels clean sheets after every guest?

Sheets are usually changed between guests, and sometimes state law requires it, but there's no guarantee that they will be. As for bedspreads, forget it. As countless hidden-camera investigative TV programs have confirmed, they aren't washed regularly.



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Typically, hotels wash their bedding once every week including various kinds of comforters, sheets, and pillows. However, they often swap out the pillowcases and linens between the guests. It's a common practice that the hotel comforters are rarely automatically changed – unless a guest requests it.

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Typically, hotels wash their bedding once every week including various kinds of comforters, sheets, and pillows. However, they often swap out the pillowcases and linens between the guests. It's a common practice that the hotel comforters are rarely automatically changed – unless a guest requests it.

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Make sure bed sheets are clean If they look stained, crumpled or have hair on them, ask for a change immediately (or, better still, find a different hotel). Your nose can also be useful here – if they smell, it's a no-no. Check to see if the sheets have fold marks, and whether they feel crisp or soft and sticky.

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Request new linens, pillows, or blankets: When you arrive, you can request new linens or pillows, even blankets, from the hotel before you settle in. In upscale hotels, sheets are typically the cleanest thing in the room, but freshly washed pillows could help. Bring your own sheet set: Extreme? Maybe.

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Glassware, linen and the TV remote Typically, they don't get cleaned between guests and become a breeding ground for bacteria. Use the pillows from the closet; they're more likely to be freshly washed than the ones on the bed.

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You should behave in the same manner as if you were [a] guest in someone's house, she explained. Be delicate. Flush your toilet, clean up after yourself and don't leave broken glass all over the floor. But showing basic courtesy doesn't necessarily mean that you should remake your bed and scrub the bathroom floor.

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Hotels have specific policies in place when it comes to stained sheets. Generally, if the hotel deems the stain to be beyond what they consider normal wear and tear, they will charge for the damage.

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For the sleeping area, check the underside of the pillows to see if they've simply been flipped, and inspect the sheets properly – any remaining wrinkles are a sign they have not been cleaned, and any brown 'spots' could be bed bugs – which is incredibly serious, and you should leave immediately.

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Best Practices for Sanitization One important aspect of maintaining cleanliness in hotels is the regular sanitization of pillows. While it may not be a topic that guests often think about, hotels take great care to ensure that pillows are properly cleaned and sanitized between guests.

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Here's what should happen: The standard operating procedure is for towels and sheets to be changed between every guest, according to Joe McInerney, president of the American Hotel & Lodging Association (www.ahla.org). Towels are also swapped out every day at some, but not all properties. Some do, some don't, he says.

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Daily room cleaning used to be standard practice in hotels. But since the pandemic, it's become less so. More than a hundred hotel workers and their supporters marched on a grey day last February, wearing bright red knit hats and carrying signs with a message: CLEAN HOTEL ROOMS SAVE JOBS.

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In a hotel, towels have to be washed after every single guest, many times, while guests are still there. They are washed much more frequently than your everyday towel. That's why after 1-year, it's customary to consider replacing your towels and trading them in for newer, brighter alternatives.

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At first glance, using all-white bedding in a hotel might seem a bit absurd; white fabric is the easiest to stain, after all. But that's also exactly why it makes sense. White sheets assure guests that the bed is clean and fresh.

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According to studies, some of the dirtiest places in a hotel room include :
  • the TV remote control.
  • the bathroom.
  • the light switches.
  • the door handles.
  • carpets and hotel furniture.


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When checking for bed bugs in a hotel room, housekeeping staff should also check: along the seams, inside covers and around the zips of sofas and chairs. where furniture, skirting boards and carpets meet the wall. along the seals of doors and drawers as well as the joints.

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If you find your room dirty upon check-in, you may want to first take a picture or video, then simply speak to the front desk. If it's easily resolvable, the front desk will typically send someone to clean it and move you into another room.

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When a guest comes within ten (10) feet of a team member(s), the team member(s) should cease their conversation to acknowledge the approaching guest. At approximately five (5) feet our team members should acknowledge the guest(s) with a nod or greeting, whenever appropriate.

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I've Done This. The next time you're staying at a hotel, when done with your towel, leave it hanging or on the sink. It's one less towel the staff need to pick up from the floor. It's a small act but can make a difference.

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