You might think staying in a hotel is all about rest and relaxation if you only book them for vacations. But for hotel staff, it’s a different story. Luxury hotel employees are sharing secrets on Reddit about what really happens behind the scenes. Below are some unsettling stories. Enjoy reading these details that management might want to keep hidden, and upvote the tales that will make you rethink your next hotel stay!
All you have to do is ask
“Front desk knows all the call girls. We give them water on the way out and sometimes call them taxis. Management doesn’t like us doing it but escorts tip well.” – Reddit
Money can’t buy class
“I only work as a housekeeper at a regular 4 star Hotel, but probably about 25% of people either bleed or leave s**t stains on the beds. It’s truly atrocious how disgusting people are, especially when they know someone else is cleaning it up. Even the wealthier guests. And the best tippers are the cleanest people. If someone fully s**t on the bed and used towels to wipe, left cum on the shower door, drank heavily and puked on the carpet in multiple places, and clogged the toilet, that person will not tip at all. But the person who barely used the full bed and didn’t use the shower at all and was super clean and polite, now that’s a good tipper.” – Reddit
Keep it cold
“My buddy was a dive instructor at a luxury resort on an island.
One of the guests had a heart attack on the diving excursion(before he got off the boat).
The nearest Doctor couldn’t come for 24hrs, so they put the corpse in a guest room and cranked up the aircon.
Of course reception gave the key to the corpse room to a newly arrived honeymooning couple. They were greeted by the star of weekend at Bernies
Edit for clarity: Dr was to sign off death, do formalities not to save life.
“When I worked at a nice hotel, the ‘affair [code of conduct]’ was brought up in training. Never mention a person being a regular and don’t mention anything about their partner or the fact it’s a different partner. That became a rule after some valet basically kickstarted a very nasty divorce with a wealthy guest.” – Reddit
Running water down the hall
“My brother worked in an upscale hotel in Southern California. A morbidly obese guest sat on the toilet in his room, shattered it, got his femoral artery slashed by a chunk of broken toilet, bled to death, and flooded his room when the water line ruptured. My brother found out about it from the maintenance guy who found the body. Management made sure no other guest ever knew, including the guests in the room below the death scene who called for maintenance because water was running down their wall.” – Reddit
Money can’t buy brains either
“I worked in room service at a very chic hotel in Miami. One guest requested that a specific waitresses (not a room service worker) always deliver him food. Not exactly sure what went on in there, but he tipped her with a big bag of weed each time. Which she would promptly bring back to share with the room service staff. Calvin Klein brought his own food because he was on a special diet. He was an a*****e about it too. I can confirm that the concierge will get you WHATEVER you want: women, d***s, Cuban cigars, guest listed at clubs…
On the opposite end of the spectrum, I worked at a nice but older resort–one step above a cheap motel. A local hooker stole all the furniture from one of our rooms. It was old crappy wicker furniture. We had a local couple, who were staying with us to avoid being served for a lawsuit. We weren’t allowed to say that they were staying there. The police eventually showed up for them.
There were several times when guests would come to the front desk claiming the maids had stolen something from their room. They would be irate, demanding we call the police. Every. Single. Time. They found the item either in their luggage or car, or their travel companions had moved/packed the item.
One gentleman claimed that he forgot his very expensive camera in his room. My manager pulled up video that showed him packing up his car, placing the camera on top of the car and driving off without realizing it.” – Reddit
Specter dumper
“A family member used to work at Opryland Hotel in Nashville. Yes, it’s super fancy. For about a year, they had a phantom pooper. As in, random dumps left in random places. It was always in corners where security cameras didn’t reach. They figured it was an employee, and had some ideas, but never knew who it was, until someone left and it stopped. This was about 20 years ago.” – Reddit
Must be a really noisy floor
“Porn shoots. And you know those carpets and upholstery ain’t getting cleaned.” – Reddit
Put his foot down
“I used to work as a freelance bartender and hotels were always the worst run situation I would end up in. Here are some examples from a really nice looking hotel in an old monastery.
The beer lines had never been cleaned, like literally never. I asked where the equipment was to do it and no-one could tell me. I eventually found it dusty in a closet in the cellar.
The breakfast buffet leftovers were usually reheated and given to the staff, but sometimes became the following day’s breakfast buffet.
The chefs were just s**t faced pretty much every day.
The worst I saw though was the wine put out on tables at a wedding. They married them up, recapped them, and put them back in the cellar. Not even the same wine getting poured into bottles. Guests had drank straight from them and everyone had seen, and no-one had an issue with this. In my country this is actually illegal, it’s called diverting waste. This was the final straw for me in this particular venue. I told the manager that I didn’t give a s**t what he did after my time there ended but there was no f*****g way I was letting that wine be resold. He tried to tell me that it was perfectly legal, I cut him off and told him that it wasn’t, it doesn’t matter either way, it’s disgusting and immoral, and if I find a single bottle of that wine in the stores I’m walking out.
Luckily when you’re freelance bartending somewhere you’re there because they desperately need you, so threatening to leave works really well.” – Reddit
Money is no issue
“I worked in golf resorts for a while, dealt with elite 1% a**hats for many years. I’m not going to give anyone a playbook at stealing identities, but billionaires are notoriously careless with their bank information. In a hotel, there are times where you need a credit card authorization form, faxed. It’s a major security risk to send it through any other electronic way. But these one percenters see all that as an inconvenience. They will be like “listen, I don’t give a s**t, I don’t care about your policy, you’re going to take my info however *I* give it to you.” Remember when Mark Zuckerberg was burned for having a password “dadada”? This is exactly what some of these wealthy people do.” – Reddit
Where’s security?
“We had valet service at our hotel, and due to huge amounts of theft and breakins by bums in our lots we had to go thru guests cars and take everything of value out to hid stuff in our conference room, then put it all back in before we brought their car around.
Was ridiculous. *and* we had to keep it under wraps.” – Reddit
Explains the scratching
“Bed Bugs: Larger hotels have better insurance to compensate for bedbugs. We wont say their name but we will hand you over to human resources who files a claim and start a compensation package. As for when it happens it can cost us between 2500 and 5k to clear a room of them and we treat the rooms on each side of the infected.” – Reddit
The fast life is a gamble
“I work in a Vegas casino and I’ve seen, on multiple occasions, luggage down at the trash dock. I mean luggage with airport tags still attached that look like they’re in use.
Could draw a couple conclusions. Are people buying new luggage here? Not likely. We sell it, but these are newer bags I’m seeing. The much more likely scenario is these people are either no longer here or no longer alive. Deaths happen here and you’ll never hear about them. Trafficking is the darker thought for me. Plenty of beautiful young women here being way too loose with their own safety.
—no one is blaming the women. But getting blackout drunk and wandering off into Naked City or down Flamingo rd at 2am is disregarding your own safety.” – Reddit
Boss is bored
“We have a secret way in from the parking garage that leads to the executive offices. It’s uh. For prostitutes.” – Reddit
Diva protocol
“I worked cooking at an ultra exclusive resort in Utah ($3k-$12k/night)
Nothing that exciting happened in my year there. I found a bottle in the tallboy (large fridge) labeled ‘Kristen Belle’s Breastmilk. DO NOT USE’
Most celebrities were nice, except for David Beckham. He specifically requested no staff members make eye contact with him
I had put in my 2 weeks, and was really drunk on a day off, and made a post on FB about how Gordon Ramsay was coming and I hoped he wasn’t filming Kitchen Nightmares with us. I was fired within 24 hrs, lol. I did get to cook fish tacos for him and his family though, and I heard he complimented the dinner kitchen crew directly (partially open kitchen), which is cool.” – Reddit
Waffle stomp
“My wife claims that the amount of people who s**t in the shower far exceeds however many people you think s**t in a shower
Edit: 1000 people have commented waffle stomp. You do not have to comment waffle stomp. Please stop giving me notifications.” – Reddit
Keep it hush hush
“My cousin worked in Vegas at a few major resorts from 2008 to 2015. He said that for most of them, the staff was the best people to ask where to get drugs from as they were the ones around the most. He said not to ask directly, but if you have a bellboy bring up something, ask them or ask room service. They usually can sell directly or know who’s holding in the hotel.” – Reddit
And money can’t buy character
“I used to work at a high-end lodge that hosted holiday parties/fancy dinners for software giants, and one exec peed ALL OVER a room. It was $13,000 in damage. We regularly had rich guys pull up in their Lamborghinis with a sex-worker. My favorite was the couple we had to essentially evict from their room due to smell and noise complaints. When we got in, there were dozens of designer shoe boxes and coke residue everywhere. The woman left with her foot hanging out the window as they drove away — wealthy people are weird.” – Reddit
Eyes on you
“A well-known luxury hotel and resort chain keeps a database of you. They get pictures from the internet and basically ‘stalk you’ to create a profile. They put what you ordered to eat, how many towels you needed, what drink you liked, your kids’ names and birthdays, addresses, and phone numbers. Everyone working in the hotel has access to this database and can see your information. It’s not all good stuff, either. We know ‘you were an a**hole to Jen’ while you were staying in London. The one I was at had to remove cameras in the lobby because big wig guys would bring their mistresses and no evidence was allowed to be recorded.” – Reddit
How thoughtful
“One thing management definitely wouldn’t want guests to know is how sometimes housekeeping cuts corners if they are running behind. If you’re staying just one night and your sheets look and smell clean enough, they might not actually get washed. That’s right, management sometimes instructs housekeeping to skip the wash if it seems unnecessary. So, that ‘fresh’ bedding you’re snuggling into? It might have been slept in by the previous guest. Sweet dreams!
Source: Former luxury hotel employee bf.” – Reddit
Poor souls
“There is this hotel near the Seatac airport. people will rent rooms on the back side top floors and then suicide off the balcony. Yeh they are not going to run that in the news. Not often, but when it happens no one knows.” – Reddit
Good thought
“Some luxury hotels that cater to sports teams have standing agreements that no room service is allowed after the team departs, otherwise, the girls the athletes brought back the night before will rack up huge bills the team has to pay (Edited for clarity)” – Reddit
But they still paid
“My story’s quite tame compared to most of the ones here. When I was in college in the early 1990s, I was a banquet server at a semi-high end place, and there was a couple who stayed in a room for several days and ordered room service for all their meals, including at least one bottle of Dom Perignon champagne, which at that time was $150 plus tip.
They were otherwise unremarkable except for one thing: When they checked out, they paid their bill entirely in quarters, which they brought to the lobby in canvas bags. We guessed they most likely owned a car wash, or a laundromat.” – Reddit
Everyone should be on alert
“Human trafficking became so bad that the company gave us training on looking out for it. There is policy in place to knowingly cause you issue and pacify you (ex: routine elevator maintenance during a busy period because the tech travels around and it is now or 3 weeks from now. The elevator did not “have unforseen issues”) Professionals are the worst guests for partying and puking everywhere and pissing in halls and breaking things and f*****g in public areas… lawyers, doctors, teachers. In that order. Whenever they had conventions, extra staff were on the next day for dealing with damage. EDIT: I forgot to add overbooking as an example of d**king with people. We assumed not everyone would show on a 100% occupancy night and booked more than we could hold. The rare time we did have everyone show, “heres free stuff and a ride to x hotel”. We even had friendly agreements with neighbouring competition to let each other know when we could take each others overbookings.” – Reddit
Interesting conversation
“I worked in fancy hotels for over a decade some corporate owned, private owned and indian owned. Just about anything you can imagine happens. I was in a group of managers of different properties who would meet weekly for drinks and we would share ” well you wouldn’t believe this s**t” stories. We had a saying, “don’t ever say I have seen it all or what’s the worst that can happen”.
But to be specific, fires, death, robbery, prostitution, sex in every nook and cranny, drunk people doing stupid s**t, “important people” doing stupid s**t and thinking their clout can make it go away. However, the best ones are really the most un-wild and just mechanical failures. Things like fire systems going off , a boiler busting and water raining down an elevator all the way to the lobby. Scissor lifts falling through the floor because the dirt washed out under the foundation concreate.
If you really want to get a daily dose of what it’s like front of house ppl have a sub called r/TalesFromTheFrontDesk/
Probably the most scarry thing is really just the turn over rate. The owners/ corporate overloards are always trying to save a buck anywhere they can. And it’s a shark filed world. I have seen so many times were they would fire the managers of departments who were loyal and hard working just to save 2k a year promoting someone who barely knew what to do. We ask the employees to deal with the unexpected all the time and never reward them and it’s just a game of how long will they put up with this s**t vs do they believe they can do better vs will someone do it for less pay without them realizing it.” – Reddit
No need to tell them
“Having worked in the casino industry, one of my fellow slot managers used to be a hotel manager at the Rio in Las Vegas. He had a couple try to book a room but the hotel was completely sold out. Shortly after he got a call from housekeeping that an older couple was found unresponsive and most likely deceased in their room. They called the police, and the authorities removed the bodies. Not long after, housekeeping cleaned the room. Seeing that the earlier couple was nearby, the manager called them over and offered them the room. They were ecstatic and took it not knowing what had just occurred. The manager gave them a discount on the bill.” – Reddit
Action comedy flick in the making
“We know criminal enterprises have funded casinos in the past. I worked at Revel Casino (Ocean Casino Resort) in Atlantic City before and after its opening. One thing they kept mentioning in our onboarding was that the triads (a Chinese transnational organized crime syndicate) were funding the casino. I thought it was super strange that these execs were just openly telling this to brand-new hires.” – Reddit
Tricks of the trade
“We over book rooms just like a flight over books seats. If your method of payment isn’t authorizing enough money for what you have been spending we’ll have the valet give your keys to the front desk and we’ll lock you out of the room until you get a new method of payment.” – Reddit
So what was the point?
“During housekeeping, hotels use different-colored cloths to wipe your drinking glasses, cutlery, toilets, and sinks to avoid contamination. They just don’t bother separating these cloths after wiping and moving to the next room.” – Reddit
No wasting that bottle
“Worked a while back at a 5-Star/5 Diamond resort in Vegas in room service. At that time, if you bought a bottle of booze for your room and didn’t open it (including putting it out with your dishes), then it is re-sold. Was very frequent.” – Reddit
Conspiracy theory
”
I was once waiting for an elevator in a hotel pretty early in the morning. The doors opened & reflexively I started to get on. But it was filled with EMTs. a stretcher, and the hotel’s general manager. He politely suggested I wait for the next one.
The “patient” had an oxygen mask on, with some tubes leading… somewhere. Later I noticed that the ambulance pulled off without the siren & waited for a stop light. I suspect he was dead all along, and they just made it look like he was unconscious & getting treatment.” – Reddit
Don’t get sick in there
“Always clean your cups and glasses in your room before you drink out of them. No matter how posh your hotel is – chambermaids are paid minimum wage and are cleaning 15 rooms and bathrooms plus a day. They are cutting corners. The same towel that was wiping the toilet and bath may have also wiped your cup and glasses. And remove that bed spread. Most hotels hardly ever have them cleaned. Hotel staff are great fun. They work hard AF and they play hard AF. I spent years in the industry. So much fun, but so much hard work.” – Reddit
Unfair but money talks
“They absolutely will sell out your reservation for a “more important situation.” Your reservation doesn’t mean shit. I had to deal with that with hotel contracts: if it’s my corporation versus one of the Fortune 500, I will lose. They know that they will more than cover the cost of any lawsuit I may bring upon them.
A good example happened to a group in my circles recently: they were holding an event at the hotel, but then a huge sportsball tournament thing came through. The hotel knew that they could just boot the entire room block out (like 500-600 reservations and the function space on the contract), lie about why this happened, jack up the rates, and open it up to the high rollers for the incoming sports tournament. A week before the event, they sent everyone a room cancellation, lying that the event had been canceled. The runners of the event started getting angry texts, “WTF is even this???” and they had to scramble to find a new venue for their event, which went better than I would have guessed, but still impacted them financially (perhaps fatally). The hotel violated the contract, and it was totally illegal, but the hotel banked on the event not having the time or staff to deal with being fucked over. “So sue us.” The hotel is owned by the city (which they are in), which is rare for a franchise brand name, but it does make them very hard to sue.” – Reddit
Definitely make a movie
“I was night manager at one in the 80’s- there’s a novel in this somewhere.
I had three suicides, two different DEA busts that involved some pretty serious gangsters, a German guy that was a genuine international fugitive who got really drunk at the bar and announced he was wanted in four countries, plenty of times we had bed bug infestations (closed the room for two days, threw a bug bomb in, back open for business), a gourmet restaurant that would advertise made from stock soups that were commercial cans of Campbells and served frozen steaks, several klepto employees who got pass keys and tossed guest rooms for valuables, a steady stream of local cops/ detectives who snagged free rooms for themselves and their mistresses, the head bellhop ran a prostitution ring…there’s more, but it was an eye opener for a green horn kid from the sticks.” – Reddit
They need to be scared first
“I’m staying in a high end resort hotel in Maui and we had a cockroach infestation our first two nights. Like waking up to a cockroach falling on our head from the wall and fluttering around on the floor. One crawled over my foot. I’ve killed multiple ones and house cleaning has had to clean bug guts off the floor each time.
The management didn’t offer anything more than sending a maintenance worker to spray the room, though their attitude suddenly changed when I texted photos I’ve taken of the cockroaches to the concierge number. We’ve had comped pool cabanas and drinks. What’s funny is that I’ll get a call from a manager to apologize again, but they never say what they’re apologizing for. Just “we’re sorry you had an unpleasant experience” and I’ll say “yeah we didn’t enjoy cockroaches falling on the head of our bed.” No acknowledgement, just offer another complimentary drink or cabana rental.
So far, they haven’t mentioned anything about reducing our room charge because it took them until day 3 to move us to a new room. Let’s see what they do at check out… or else several cockroach pics will go up on my Google review.” – Reddit
35 Luxury Resort Workers Whisper Their Darkest, Juiciest Secrets
Eduardo Gaskell
05.08.24
You might think staying in a hotel is all about rest and relaxation if you only book them for vacations. But for hotel staff, it’s a different story. Luxury hotel employees are sharing secrets on Reddit about what really happens behind the scenes. Below are some unsettling stories. Enjoy reading these details that management might want to keep hidden, and upvote the tales that will make you rethink your next hotel stay!
All you have to do is ask
“Front desk knows all the call girls. We give them water on the way out and sometimes call them taxis. Management doesn’t like us doing it but escorts tip well.” – Reddit