Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way you “fit easily” in these rooms. You’re throwing a kid on the floor or cramming 3 people in a bed which is nuts. You need 2 rooms. Parent in each room, split up the kids.
This
Just because nobody complains doesn’t mean nobody is uncomfortable.
We do this. Three kids (8, 10, 10) in one bed, my boyfriend and I in the other. Our kids can’t be in a different room. They are too young.
We don’t have a lot of money but love to travel. Our kids have never complained, because they love to travel!
Are all of the kids yours, all his? Or a mix?
Of course the kids are too young to be in their own room, but you and your boyfriend should each sleep in a room. You with your kids in one room, your boyfriend with his kids in the other. Or all the females in one room, all the males in another.
At ages 8-10 they are way too big to all share one queen size bed.
Two are mine; one is his. We compromise on space so that we can travel more. No one complains.
Girl be quiet. Those kids are not happy to be shoved in a bed all 3 together because you and your boyfriend can’t afford a second room.
The kids can’t be in a room by themselves. They are kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way you “fit easily” in these rooms. You’re throwing a kid on the floor or cramming 3 people in a bed which is nuts. You need 2 rooms. Parent in each room, split up the kids.
This
Just because nobody complains doesn’t mean nobody is uncomfortable.
We do this. Three kids (8, 10, 10) in one bed, my boyfriend and I in the other. Our kids can’t be in a different room. They are too young.
We don’t have a lot of money but love to travel. Our kids have never complained, because they love to travel!
Are all of the kids yours, all his? Or a mix?
Of course the kids are too young to be in their own room, but you and your boyfriend should each sleep in a room. You with your kids in one room, your boyfriend with his kids in the other. Or all the females in one room, all the males in another.
At ages 8-10 they are way too big to all share one queen size bed.
Two are mine; one is his. We compromise on space so that we can travel more. No one complains.
Girl be quiet. Those kids are not happy to be shoved in a bed all 3 together because you and your boyfriend can’t afford a second room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which country? Many countries around the world aggressively monitor this and you would not be allowed to have 5 people at check in.
Singapore
I would especially avoid breaking rules and laws there.
Guess I can’t go to Singapore. I get terrible coffee breath and need gum.
Singapore enforces all rules and laws consistently and quite strictly. Do not even jaywalk there.
They arrest you for chewing gum in public.
Anonymous wrote:For all of you people cramming your entire brood into a 2-person occupancy room, I mean, congrats? Sounds like hell to me. Why not get two rooms?
Besides, most hotels want the passports of everyone in the room, not just the person who made the booking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way you “fit easily” in these rooms. You’re throwing a kid on the floor or cramming 3 people in a bed which is nuts. You need 2 rooms. Parent in each room, split up the kids.
This
Just because nobody complains doesn’t mean nobody is uncomfortable.
We do this. Three kids (8, 10, 10) in one bed, my boyfriend and I in the other. Our kids can’t be in a different room. They are too young.
We don’t have a lot of money but love to travel. Our kids have never complained, because they love to travel!
Are all of the kids yours, all his? Or a mix?
Of course the kids are too young to be in their own room, but you and your boyfriend should each sleep in a room. You with your kids in one room, your boyfriend with his kids in the other. Or all the females in one room, all the males in another.
At ages 8-10 they are way too big to all share one queen size bed.
Two are mine; one is his. We compromise on space so that we can travel more. No one complains.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which country? Many countries around the world aggressively monitor this and you would not be allowed to have 5 people at check in.
Singapore
I would especially avoid breaking rules and laws there.
Singapore enforces all rules and laws consistently and quite strictly. Do not even jaywalk there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way you “fit easily” in these rooms. You’re throwing a kid on the floor or cramming 3 people in a bed which is nuts. You need 2 rooms. Parent in each room, split up the kids.
This
Just because nobody complains doesn’t mean nobody is uncomfortable.
We do this. Three kids (8, 10, 10) in one bed, my boyfriend and I in the other. Our kids can’t be in a different room. They are too young.
We don’t have a lot of money but love to travel. Our kids have never complained, because they love to travel!
Are all of the kids yours, all his? Or a mix?
Of course the kids are too young to be in their own room, but you and your boyfriend should each sleep in a room. You with your kids in one room, your boyfriend with his kids in the other. Or all the females in one room, all the males in another.
At ages 8-10 they are way too big to all share one queen size bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which country? Many countries around the world aggressively monitor this and you would not be allowed to have 5 people at check in.
Singapore
I would especially avoid breaking rules and laws there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which country? Many countries around the world aggressively monitor this and you would not be allowed to have 5 people at check in.
Singapore
Anonymous wrote:I've never seen anyone in a U.S. hotel attempt to enforce occupancy limits except when it's an obvious problem situation, like 10 college students trying to cram in a single room (and even then a lot of hotels don't care).
That said, I wouldn't attempt it overseas. Hotels in some places are more strict about occupancy limits and you don't want to run afoul of the rules in an unfamiliar location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way you “fit easily” in these rooms. You’re throwing a kid on the floor or cramming 3 people in a bed which is nuts. You need 2 rooms. Parent in each room, split up the kids.
This
Just because nobody complains doesn’t mean nobody is uncomfortable.
We do this. Three kids (8, 10, 10) in one bed, my boyfriend and I in the other. Our kids can’t be in a different room. They are too young.
We don’t have a lot of money but love to travel. Our kids have never complained, because they love to travel!
Anonymous wrote:I've never seen anyone in a U.S. hotel attempt to enforce occupancy limits except when it's an obvious problem situation, like 10 college students trying to cram in a single room (and even then a lot of hotels don't care).
That said, I wouldn't attempt it overseas. Hotels in some places are more strict about occupancy limits and you don't want to run afoul of the rules in an unfamiliar location.