+1 |
You’re nuts to pay that nightly. |
+1 I feel the same way, PP. |
The issue here is not really one of hotel room costs... |
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We try for under $400, but hotels have gotten pricey so sometimes it’s $450, especially for weekend rates.
I don’t waste money on expensive resorts. |
Congratulations? Everyone has different preferences. Most of the time when I'm on vacation with family, we don't spend much time in the hotel room except to sleep because we're off doing things during the day, so I prefer to spend $150/night unless it's a high cost area like NYC or SF where that's difficult to do. |
I mean, not really? But I like a clean, plush, updated room with certain amenities when I am in the room. I like a balcony with a view. I want super soft towels and a rainfall shower head. I want a plush bed with entirely too many pillows. Stuff like that. |
Such bad attitude in response to posts that recognize that different people value different things. |
Good expensive hotels still only do a quick clean and don't change out the comforters. |
I haven't stayed in a hotel with a comforter in years. |
Exactly. I don’t know what $500 gets you in a hotel room that would make my life better. Designer furniture? Sparkling water? More pastries? If I travel it’s usually because I want to see the destination, not lounge around the hotel. |
Probably not as much as you think. I live in an affluent area and there's plenty of parents who say it's the flagship state school or find a merit elsewhere. Because they don't see the value in paying extra for a fancier college when the flagship is pretty good. I do see their point. Same principle can apply to hotels. Spend 4 nights in a hotel whether a 200 night or 500 night place, after the four days you're in the same place. Likewise, after four years at a flagship or a fancy private college, you're in the same place. |
Often the convenience of the location drives up the price. So a $500 hotel in the heart of the city is no different in furnishings or amenities than the $200 hotel on the fringe of the city limits. They’re paying extra for the convenience of walking to shops and restaurants and easier access to transportation. |
| Our HHI is 5 million a month. We are not concerned about hotel prices. |
This. We are not a sit at a beach and relax in the hotel room kind of family. We tour around and see the sights, leave the hotel early, return late, rinse, repeat. No point in spending money for the extras that are meaningless for our family. If it's important to you, and you have money to spend on fancy hotels, go for it. It's just not our priority |