576 votes, 243 comments. has anyone else noticed a ton of hotels now have open plan bathrooms with zero privacy? occasionally there's a curtain you. Glass walls, barn doors, and complicated 'smart' tech are some of the things travelers hate about hotel bathrooms.
There were also complaints about other heinous concepts in newer accommodations, like a window between the bathroom and hotel room or a frosted glass wall dividing the hotel room. A woman's viral Reddit post took hotel bathroom designers to task. Plenty of other commenters weighed in with suggestions for fixes, too.
74 votes, 265 comments. I'm wondering whether anyone uses the bath in hotels, especially budget hotels. I would never do so because they tend to be.
Idk how many people will agree to this but even more important than the bed or other furniture the first thing I check when I enter my hotel room during vacations is the bathroom. It's high priority to me the bathroom is good enough in a hotel room. After a long flight, a grueling day of business meetings, or simply walking around a new city, few things sound better than a hot bath.
To some. Should you actually fill up that hotel tub, you may. Are you a fan of privacy? This bathroom feature is all the rage in hotels nowadays, but many guests aren't happy.
Here's what to look for when booking a room. (1) using hotel bath towels, even if completely sanitary, was like wearing someone else's underwear (2) most hotels towels are never, ever that clean (3) people use hotel towels for "weird" things or put them down on the beds for sexual activities (4) people use hotel towels to clean the bathroom floor or worse, the toilet seat. An unusual detail in a hotel bathroom has sparked intense debate on social media.
Posting on Reddit, one traveller shared a photograph of the "bizarre" feature in the glass surrounding the shower cubicle. "My hotel room shower has a circular cutout in the glass that lets you turn on the water without getting wet," the Reddit user wrote.