| $20 day |
What do you expect at a Fairfield inn? I’d leave $5 when I check out. Just stayed at a JW. Left $20/day for two rooms because they did chest daily. One day, the lady didn’t take it. I |
| $5/day that they come and clean. If I stay one night I typically don’t tip as they don’t clean during my stay. 0$ when overseas. |
| Nothing. |
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I always tip although the amount varies wildly based on what cash I have available. I use cash so rarely these days. Sometimes I’ve thought to get a few hundred in $5 bills and stash them in my suitcase but then when I run out it takes awhile before I remember to do it again.
Generally I thinking tipping hotel housekeepers well is a way to get money to low income working women who have a largely invisible job. |
| I typically don't |
I bring Clorox Wipes for the airplanes and to wipe down the hotel when I get there. I certainly don't clean before I leave. That seems crazy. But I don't leave any garbage on the floor, no stains, nothing crazy. |
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| I generally don’t tip. |
+1 And I don’t tip either, especially post COVID. Housekeeping does not clean my room or empty trash during my stay. My room rate covers that my room is clean and made for my stay. |
| $10 a night |
I feel passionate about this topic. Valet and baggage service providers (usually men) regularly receive excellent tips. The women scrubbing toilets and changing the sheets get little. I leave about $5 per day. |
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What housekeeping?
I’ve stayed at even nice hotels (JW, Marriotts, or lower end Residence, Courtyard, etc) and received little in the way of housekeeping (beds not made or covers hastily pulled up, no fresh towels, not even taking out the trash) in the last two years. Prior maybe 3-4/day. |
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$5/day, left every day (not all at checkout) because it can be different staff each day.
Good point about possibly increasing, OP. I haven't increased this amount in probably a decade, so maybe I'm low these days. My mom worked her way through college as a motel housekeeper, so tipping was drilled into me. |
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I used to work at a hotel chain that rhymes with chariot. I know that the housekeeping used the wet towels left on the floor by guests to wipe down everything including toilets, sinks, showers, coffee pots, cups etc. Cleaners regularly wet the mops in the toilet bowl to mop floors.
The first thing I do is inspect the bed to see that the mattress and sheets are not soiled. Next check the edges and crevices of the mattress and beds. Bedbugs have a mild stinkbug smell and they congregate in the crevices. Also, they will leave little brown specks on the mattress or sheets so check for that. I also wipe down everything with Lysol wipes, and wash the cups and coffee mugs etc with some dish soap that I carry. Finally, lysol the remote, switches, phone, alarm, door handles. They are not sanitizing anything because they have very little time to clean each room. And some guests are slobs and it takes them longer to clean that up. I don't want house cleaning to come and clean my room because they will make every thing contaminated again. So, I only ask for clean towels and toiletries. I also like to keep my room clean and beds made. This allows me to not lose track of possessions or leave something in the room. There is a lot of stealing that happens so it is better to not have anyone come inside your room. |