Don't leave your laptop unsecured in your hotel room when you are out. Use your security cable or lock it in the room safe. While the hotel staff may be trustworthy, there's no reason to take chances should someone gain unauthorized access to your room.
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Some of the most frequently touched places – phone, light switches, pillowcases – are contaminated with harmful bacteria and germs. Always remember to properly inspect your room and bring disinfectant wipes with you so that you can wipe down all of these germ infested objects.
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.
It is illegal in the United States to have undisclosed cameras in vacation rental homes or hotels. It's also against the policies of every major hotel and vacation home company to have cameras (hidden or visible) in private areas like bedrooms and bathrooms.
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.
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.
Keep your hotel room door locked at all times, whether you're inside or out. Use the deadbolt and chain lock for added security. Before opening the door, use the peephole to see who is on the other side. If you're not expecting anyone or if you don't feel comfortable, don't open the door.
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.
I suppose Karma made a visit and I should have just gone to the front desk… Most hotels do have a policy that forbids housekeeping from letting someone into their room, but a little pleading, such as I did, can go along way. Unfortunately, as I learned hotel thefts are all too common and happen even in the best hotels.
Is the first floor of a hotel safe? Safety. Guests on the first floor are the ones most at risk for break-ins since they're the most accessible rooms to people from the outside (would-be thieves also don't want to deal with the potential delay of elevators).
By covering the outlets, the risk of electric shocks or accidental contact with live wires is minimized. Additionally, bandaging outlets is an effective way of childproofing the electrical system, preventing young children from inserting objects or their fingers into the outlets.
Can hotel maids open the safe? Hotel housekeepers should not have direct access to your safe (that should be reserved for management) so this means that placing items in your safe should at the very least make your items harder to steal from housekeeping.