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How Hotels Figure Out Room Assignments (It’s Not Easy!)

a group of people standing around a counter

You’ve arrived at your hotel. It’s check-in time and there’s a line at the front desk. You’re behind someone who got a room on the 3rd floor, overlooking the dumpster. You’ve got status and got the 27th floor with a view of the main drag. Meanwhile, the couple behind you, who are there for a wedding, got a room next to their cousins, on the 11th floor.

How do hotels figure out who is going to stay where each night, anyway?

There are lots of factors to determine room allocation. In no particular order, the person who determines this has to consider:

If the hotel isn’t at full capacity, the front desk also has the ability to upgrade people (or give them the aforementioned room with the leaky faucet), based on their own judgments and circumstances surrounding that particular guest.

But how do they do it?

Each hotel has its own system and criteria. Whoever/whatever the case, apparently it’s not easy. For some hotels, there’ve been people who’ve spent their entire careers figuring out who’s checking out, who’s checking in, and who’s going to sleep where that night.

There are hotel property management system software packages nowadays, such as Hotelogix, that can help make the work easier. But I still don’t envy those whose job it is to figure out where everyone will sleep that night because, as you surely know, not everyone is always happy with the room they’re assigned.

*** Feature Image PC: Holidayextras / flickr (cropped)

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