Your Mileage May Vary

Why Hotels Charge Resort Fees & How To Maybe Not Have To Pay Them

A resort fee (also sometimes known as a facility fee, destination fee, amenity fee, or a resort charge), is a separate mandatory (taxed) fee that a guest is charged by a hotel, along with the base room rate and its tax. They began to be added to hotel bills in the late 1990s and are supposed to cover a variety of things, depending on the hotel, such as phone service, newspaper left at your door, high-speed internet access, use of the gym or pool, a bottled of water or two left in your room every day, continental breakfast, etc.

Why DO hotels charge you for a resort fee, anyway? After all, they didn’t use to. And is there any way to not have to pay it? Well…

Hotel resort fees across the United States vary from a relatively affordable $20 +/- per night to big cities where you might see prices hover around $45 or $50 or more (I’m looking at you, Las Vegas, who has hotels that charge more for the resort fees than the actual rooms, and fancy-schmancy places in Florida that charge over $150 per night in resort fees).

Oh, and that’s another thing – it’s mainly in the U.S. where resort fees are a thing. They’re illegal in many other countries, but the U.S. has no laws that say hotels can or cannot charge them. So until they’re told they can’t, they do. The good folks at KillResortFees.com are doing their best to change that.

But why do hotels charge resort fees???

Because they can. A hotel decides they want to make more money, so they start charging for things that aren’t a basic bed and a room, even if they didn’t use to charge for it, or if what they’re charging for isn’t worth nearly that much, or even if you have no intention of using anything included in the resort fee. Oh, and the hotels don’t have to pay occupancy tax on that money, because it’s not a charge for a hotel room; it’s a resort fee. #rolleyes

RF1

The problem with resort fees is they’re usually not included in the advertised price of the room. So the room rate looks low, but once the resort fee is added in, that awesome price may not look so good anymore.

What can you do about it?

Unfortunately, not a whole lot. Resort fees, when charged, are almost always mandatory. But there are a few ways you can try not to have to pay them, though:

Unfortunately, as years go by, resort fees have become more begrudgingly accepted, as well as more of the norm. So although there are still a decent amount of hotels without resort fees out there, it’s getting more and more difficult to find them.

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