Sponsored by

A hotel room pic by me

What Can You Really Take from a Hotel Room?

There’s a quiet, unspoken question every traveler has faced at least once: Can I take this home? A pair of soft slippers. A tiny bottle of shampoo. A pen with the hotel’s name on it. A bathrobe.

It feels harmless. Almost like a souvenir. But somewhere between a complimentary toiletry and a plush bathrobe lies a line- and crossing it can turn a small indulgence into something far more serious.

Let’s explore where that line really is.

Things You Can Usually Take

Hotels often expect and even encourage you to take certain items. These are built into the cost of your stay and hotels consider them as free advertisement.

Common complimentary items:

  • Toiletries (shampoo, conditioner, lotion, soap)

  • Slippers

  • Stationery (pens, notepads, postcards)

  • Tea, coffee, milk/ creamer sachets, sugar

  • Disposable items like shower caps

    These are considered single-use or low-cost branded items, often part of the hotel’s marketing strategy.

According to hospitality insights, hotels often treat these as brand touchpoints—items guests take home and remember the stay by.

Advertisement

Is Your Retirement Plan Built to Last?

Most people saving for retirement have a number in mind. Fewer have a plan for turning that number into actual income.

The Definitive Guide to Retirement Income walks you through the questions that matter: what things will cost, where the money comes from, and how to keep your portfolio aligned with your long-term goals.

If you have $1,000,000 or more saved, download your free guide and start building a retirement income plan that holds up.

⚠️ Things You Should Not Take

Then there are items that may feel tempting… but are not meant to leave the room.

These include:

  • Towels

  • Bathrobes (in some hotels, a guest may be given a monogrammed robe as a gift, but this will be clearly mentioned).

  • Bedsheets, pillows, blankets

  • Hairdryers, kettles, irons

  • Decorative items (lamps, artwork, cushions, paintings)

  • Electronics (TV remotes, speakers, tablets, clocks, tea/ coffee makers)

  • The Bible (unless it is explicitly mentioned that it is a complimentary ciopy).

Even umbrellas (often branded) are usually not complimentary unless specified.

These items are considered hotel property, not guest amenities. If you really like something and want to take it, call the front desk to ask. Sometimes hotels give you certain items at a charge.

💳 What Actually Happens If You Take Them?

Most hotels won’t confront you dramatically.

Instead, they’ll simply charge your credit card on file after checkout (that’s why they usually charge your credit card for a reverse credit when you check in).

Hotels maintain inventory lists, and housekeeping reports missing items. Many properties already have standard replacement costs built into their systems.

Advertisement

The free newsletter making HR less lonely

The best HR advice comes from those in the trenches. That’s what this is: real-world HR insights delivered in a newsletter from Hebba Youssef, a Chief People Officer who’s been there. Practical, real strategies with a dash of humor. Because HR shouldn’t be thankless—and you shouldn’t be alone in it.

⚖️ Can You Get Into Legal Trouble?

Yes, depending on the situation.

In some countries, including Japan and Nigeria, theft from hotel rooms is taken very seriously, resulting in arrests for taking items like towels, robes and even designer ash trays.

Hospitality and legal guidance referenced in industry resources indicate that while most cases are handled quietly, intentional or repeated theft can escalate legally.

In extreme scenarios, guests can be:

  • Blacklisted by hotel chains

  • Reported for theft (which may lead to fines or legal action depending on local laws)

🤍 The Grey Area

Some items sit in a confusing middle ground:

  • Branded mugs

  • Laundry bags

  • Tote bags

  • Beach flip-flops (in resorts)

The safest rule?

If it’s reusable and not obviously disposable, it likely isn’t meant to be taken, unless clearly stated.

Advertisement

Your Boss Will Think You’re an Ecom Genius

Optimizing for growth? Go-to-Millions is Ari Murray’s ecommerce newsletter packed with proven tactics, creative that converts, and real operator insights—from product strategy to paid media. No mushy strategy. Just what’s working. Subscribe free for weekly ideas that drive revenue.

A Simple Rule to Remember

If you’re unsure, ask yourself:

Was this meant to be replaced after I used it… or after I took it?

That one question usually gives you the answer.

🌿 A Thought to Leave With

Travel is about collecting memories, not things.

The best souvenirs are rarely found in hotel rooms, they’re found in the quiet moments, the views, the stories you carry back with you.

And those…
no hotel will ever charge you for 😃

Happy Travels, Yogi 💕

Subscribe to my newsletter if not already done https://yogitravels-newsletter.beehiiv.com/

Follow me on X , Follow me on Medium

Subscribe to beehiiv using the link below to get a 14 day free trial and 20% discount off your first 3 months on any paid plan

Keep reading