Anonymous wrote:At Marriott, I rarely have an issue with ~2 hours of late checkout. I am life Platinum, which is mid-tier status.
How late do you want to checkout?
Anonymous wrote:The issue is, the hotel has no way of knowing when other guests will be checking out or checking in, and they have to have time to clean the rooms in between. If they give too many people late check out, then all the people who want early check in the next night will not get it, if they have high occupancy.
We are working on ways to make this more digital and automated in my large hotel company. (Hilton, Marriott, choice, etc)
Anonymous wrote:Just check out on time. You seem like a Karen.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you have the highest status, it’s is nearly impossible these days. Some hotels allow you to purchase late checkout though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is, the hotel has no way of knowing when other guests will be checking out or checking in, and they have to have time to clean the rooms in between. If they give too many people late check out, then all the people who want early check in the next night will not get it, if they have high occupancy.
We are working on ways to make this more digital and automated in my large hotel company. (Hilton, Marriott, choice, etc)
I always thought the issue was leaving the staff idle when they run out of rooms to clean when they could be sent home off the clock when they finished. Why is early check in for people who aren't there yet prioritized over late checkout for people who are there?
Anonymous wrote:The issue is, the hotel has no way of knowing when other guests will be checking out or checking in, and they have to have time to clean the rooms in between. If they give too many people late check out, then all the people who want early check in the next night will not get it, if they have high occupancy.
We are working on ways to make this more digital and automated in my large hotel company. (Hilton, Marriott, choice, etc)