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Do hotels wash their bedding?

Many travelers are concerned about hotel linens' cleanliness, especially bulky items like duvets and comforters. The quick answer is – yes, most hotels do wash comforters between guests. But how often they are cleaned and the methods used vary between hotels.



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The quick answer is – yes, most hotels do wash comforters between guests. But how often they are cleaned and the methods used vary between hotels.

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Many travelers are concerned about hotel linens' cleanliness, especially bulky items like duvets and comforters. The quick answer is – yes, most hotels do wash comforters between guests. But how often they are cleaned and the methods used vary between hotels.

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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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How to check for both live and previous signs of bug infestations.
  1. Take off all the sheets from the bed. ...
  2. Check the underside of the mattress, most hotels flip and rotate their mattresses about 4 times a year.
  3. Check the pillows for the same reddish residue. ...
  4. The room should smell fresh but not scented.


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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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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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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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Mid-range hotels tend to change sheets every 2-3 days on average. However, policies vary by hotel brand and individual property management. Budget hotels and motels may leave sheets unchanged for multiple nights or even an entire stay unless the guest requests fresh linens.

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Most hotels offer a laundry service where you place your dirty clothes in a bag you can find in your in-room closet, fill out an attached card listing the items you need laundered and the additional services you require (such as dry cleaning or ironing), and leave the bag in the hall.

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Guests place used towels in the return cabinet, which scans the RFID tag in each towel and removes them from the guest's account. 5. If a guest walks out with towels, those towels remain on his or her account. Hotel and resort management know exactly who has taken them and can handle it in any way they deem fit.

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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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Most hotels put at least four pillows on a bed for two because they want to provide guests with the ultimate comfort experience. Having multiple pillows allows guests to customize their sleeping experience by choosing between different levels of firmness and support.

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Hotel Hygiene Issues Hotel pillows are at risk for dust mites; another good reason to pack your own pillow.

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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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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.

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