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Shutterstock.com/Woman with a suitcase

Shutterstock.com/Woman with a suitcase

Staying in a hotel by yourself is one of the most luxurious experiences. You have someone else cleaning your room, you get all the free little bottles of shampoo you want, you get room service, you get to throw your clothes everywhere, and you don’t need to take any grief from anybody about it. Even if you’re not traveling, you should try checking into a local hotel for a staycation sometime. It’s the best. But, there is a lot of activity at hotels and not enough security to monitor it all. Most hotels are used to hundreds of people who are clearly not guests wandering their halls since they may be a friend for a guest just dropping by. Unlike in a gated apartment building, nobody is checking IDs for everybody who enters a hotel. There is little stopping a complete stranger from walking right up to your room door. So here are safety tips to keep in mind if you’re a woman staying at a hotel alone.

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Splurge for the safe hotel

Before going into safety tips that are necessary at any hotel, let’s talk about picking a hotel. You may want to book a cheap one, so you have more money to eat at nice restaurants, but what’s more important? Your safety, or trying the Oysters bar? You won’t be able to enjoy yourself if you feel unsafe, so spend the extra money on a hotel that is in a good neighborhood, has security guards on call 24/7, has key-activated elevators, etc.

Image Source: Shutterstock

Image Source: Shutterstock

Book under a man’s name

The hotel doesn’t care whose name the reservation is under so long as the credit card works. Criminals preying on single women might get a peek at the guest list, and search for female names and their corresponding room number. So put your room under Robert or Philip.

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Shutterstock

Don’t get picked up or dropped off at your hotel

Hopefully, you can trust your taxi drivers, but you can never take too many precautions when you’re a woman traveling alone. Have taxis pick you up at a café or restaurant near your hotel rather than at it, so they don’t know where you’re staying.

Image Source: Shutterstock

Image Source: Shutterstock

Don’t let someone see you enter your room

If you’re walking to your room and you get the sense that the person behind you is following you, just keep on walking and go back down to the lobby. If you ever get a bad feeling about somebody, do not let them see you go into your room.

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Shutterstock

Keep normal hours

If you’re a woman traveling alone, you probably shouldn’t be wandering a foreign place at four o clock in the morning anyways. But also know that most criminals are out at odd hours, and if you go in or out of your room during those hours, you might catch their attention.

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Shutterstock

Put away your belongings for housekeeping

When housekeeping cleans your room, they leave the door wide open. Anybody can walk by, take a peek in the room and get a sense for who is staying in there. If you have a box of tampons, a curling iron, and “Sex and the City” DVDs in plain site plus a noticeable lack of male items, someone could deduce that you’re a female staying alone.

Shutterstock.com/dresser

Shutterstock.com/dresser

Push the dresser against the door

It might seem a little silly, but it never hurts to push a heavy item against the door. Even if somebody gets a copy of your room key and snips the chain lock, they’ll struggle to push in a 40-pound dresser. This gives you time to call the police or front desk.