Why Do U.S. Hotels Still Offer Phones in Their Guests’ Rooms?

by SharonKurheg

It’s the 21st century and peoples’ use of technology in hotels is just amazeballs.

  • You make your reservations online
  • You pay for your room electronically
  • You may be able to check in electronically
  • You may have the option to use your phone as your door key
  • If you want food while staying in your room, you can use an app to order it and have it delivered
  • Don’t like anything on the television? You can stream movies
  • Want to do laundry during your stay? Some hotels have washers and dryers that use apps for payment and to tell you when your laundry’s done
  • And, of course, you can still use your phone, tablet or laptop for whatever you want…games, movies, phone calls, to look stuff up, as a flashlight if you wake up in the middle of the night, as your alarm clock, you name it.

So, with all of this technology at our fingertips, it brings to light a question:

Why do U.S. hotels still offer phones in their guests’ rooms?

a telephone on a table

If you go to Europe, there’s a good chance your hotel room won’t have a phone. In fact, Travelodge, a UK-brand low-budget hotel, has nearly 600 hotels, and none of them have telephones in their guests’ rooms anymore.

But in the U.S.? Chances are excellent that your hotel room, whether it’s a low-budget Motel 6 or the highest-end 5-star resort you can think of, will have phones in the guest rooms.

What’s up with that?

Mainly, it’s for safety

If you have an emergency in your room, your cell phone’s GPS may or may not be able to tell the 911 operator exactly where you are (cell phones can only be traced to within about 300 feet in accuracy). That’s especially true if you’re not connected to the hotel’s Wi-Fi. You also may or may not know the address of your hotel, which the 911 operator might need to know, in absence of it being a landline.

However, the phone in your hotel will always be able to give a precise location of where you’re calling from.

What about the “dial 9 to make an outside call” thing? Won’t that impede a call to 911?

Not anymore. But there’s a tragic reason why that’s the case.

Back in 2013, the estranged husband of a woman named Kari Hunt bludgeoned her in her Baymont Hotel room in Marshall, Texas. Her daughter tried to call 911 four times, but the calls never went through because the motel’s phone system required dialing “9” before any call to secure an outbound phone line, and the little girl wasn’t aware of that.

a woman holding a baby and a group of children

Kari Hunt & her young children

Because of that tragedy, a statute called Kari’s Law went into effect in early 2020. It requires hotels with MLTS (multi-line telephone systems) to support direct dialing 911. The system must also notify a central location on- or off-site, such as a front desk or security kiosk. The notification will provide an alert that a 911 call was placed and include a callback number and information about the caller’s location.

Other reasons

There are other reasons that hotels continue with their in-room telephone service:

  • They’re easier for older clients to use
  • Not everyone has a cell phone (according to Pew Research, as of early 2024, 97% of Americans own a cell phone. That’s a super high percentage, but it still means about 3,000,000 people in the country don’t have one. Believe it or not, one of my best friends has never owned a cell phone.)
  • Hotels can say that “free phone calls” are part of their “resort fee” (which is SUCH bullspit)

And now you know. 🙂

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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

3 comments

Aaron September 3, 2024 - 3:24 pm

I like being able to pick up the phone, press one button, and reach the front desk if I ever need anything. Additionally, the phone is linked to your room number, so the person on the other end already knows who I am and my room number, so I don’t even have to waste time identifying myself.

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Christian September 3, 2024 - 3:31 pm

Great reasons.

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Christian September 3, 2024 - 3:30 pm

My reason is a little different: sometimes I’m at a hotel and don’t want to give someone I just met my personal contact information yet. Giving them my room number is a good first step that doesn’t require a lot of trust.

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