Secret Camera Investigation: Every Single Hotel Failed To Wash Your Cups And Glasses
Fox Atlanta set up secret cameras inside 5 different hotel chains from the Holiday Inn to the Ritz Carlton (shown above) and caught every single one of them failing to properly wash the room's glasses.
At every single hotel, regardless of price, the glasses were simply rinsed out and left for the next guest. Some hotels used dirty bath towels to wipe the glasses. One hotel employee rinsed the glasses after cleaning the toilet—using the same gloves. Another one sprayed the glasses with blue cleaning fluid that was marked "Do not drink."
Fox Atlanta has turned the results of the investigation over to the local health department. Experts interviewed in the video maintain that this isn't just a case of "ew, gross" but a very serious health code violation. Dirty glasses spread disease.
Truly disgusting.
I-Team: Dirty Hotel Secrets, Pt. 2 [MyFoxAtlanta] (Thanks, Richard!)
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Comments:
W00H000 I was one of the ones who suggested this to the tips email. When my wife and I watched this last night we wanted to PUKE. This is so criminal it should be prosecuted at the corporate level. The fox reporters checked the maid carts in all the hotels they stayed in (mentioned in the reporters blog entries) and none of them had trays of new glasses so the local hotel management has no plausible way in my book to deny knowledge of the practice.
@mantari: Umm if you check the fox news blog about this story you will see when they checked in they said they would be one guest one day and a new guest the next and NO they did not changed the sheets.
@bohemian:
I have always preferred the plastic, wrapped cups for suspicion of this very thing...suspicion I once thought might be unwarranted and paranoid.
Ok, now I'm grossed out.
I always naively assume that hotel glasses were replaced and cleaned with a dish washer but the video shows that glasses are consistently "cleaned" by rinsing in the bathroom sink and often dried off with a dirty towel or washcloth--even in the expensive hotels. I've used a lot of those glasses. EEEEWWW!
I used to work as a housekeeper at a resort in Breckenridge, CO. Same thing there. Just rinse in water, dry them out, and put them back. We even re-used the paper "hats" that are placed on top of these glasses to give the impression of cleanliness.
Think about it...have you ever seen real glasses on a housekeeper's cart ready to replace the ones you've used?
I only drink from sealed disposable cups in hotels, or disinfect them with hot water from the coffeemaker before using them.
@Aladdyn: If I found toenail clippings, I'd be complaining (only to be offered a free night or something.)
I am convinced that it is exactly this practice that started the SARS crisis in Hong Kong in 2003. An infected man from Guang Dong stayed at the Metropole Hotel in Mong Kok. Within days he was dead, as were several others who stayed on the 9th floor.
I didn't realize it was a practice here in the US.
This makes me glad that I normally stay at Residence Inn hotels which have real dishwashers in the rooms. I stayed at the Residence Inn near Bryant Park last week and was quite pleased with how clean everything was. Not even little dust bunnies behind the TV or in the corners.
Still...this story definitely makes me wonder just how often this sort of thing goes on. It then makes me wonder about the other things, such as ice makers and how often they are/are not cleaned. Some grade school student working with a Uni prof did a small study where they tested for bacteria in restaurant ice machines and for good measure tested their toilets. Guess which one had fewer microbes? I'll have a coke, hold the ice please.
Eeew! Thanks for posting this right after I spent my 80th night in a Marriott hotel this year. Never used the in-room glasses myself since they have free bottled water in the full service versions of the hotel chain.
I am pretty sure that the housekeeping carts did have trays of glasses on them at the hotel I was at most often this year (Marriott in downtown Richmond, VA).
The only thing I do regularly in hotel rooms is strip any comforter or bedcovers since I don't think those get washed or replaced often enough. No other real sanitary issues to report except for the occasional stray hair in the shower.
Saw this for myself about 10 years ago when I returned to my room in the middle of it being cleaned. The housekeeper was "rinsing" glasses under bathroom tap. Since then, I have stayed at dozens of 4 and 5-star hotels and not once have I seen a cart full of clean glasses or a cart full of dirty glasses being removed. I would stick with bottled water.
@chrisdag:
totally. and either don't use or wipe down the tv remote and phone. you know that stuff never gets cleaned.
@Skeptic: Me too. EWWWWWW. How does a hotel NOT have a giant dishwasher that does nothing but wash room glasses?????
No surprise here -- years in the hotel industry have shown me that there isn't a hotel chain anywhere that spends the money necessary to purchase enough glassware (not to mention the labor dollars needed) to pull glasses from rooms and clean them properly.
What's even more amazing is the fact that health inspectors routinely take the word of hotel managers as to whether or not proper cleaning is occurring.
As someone who works for a franchise of a national hotel chain, I was disgusted when I saw the video. While it is not the practice at the hotel that I work at (we send our glasses, coffee mugs and coffee pots through the dishwasher in our restaurant), the sad reality is that this is a common practice throughout the hotel industry.
In response to this story, the brand that I work for sent out an email making sure that we are following the correct procedure for washing glasses and coffee pots. It was almost like they are in damage control mode.
Having worked in the hotel industry at various levels, beyond room revenue, cost control is paramount to profitability. Generous management rarely allows more than 30 minutes per room. Housekeepers learn how to cut corners while "polishing" the stuff that gets seen and inspected. If you have many rooms, quality control can only be done on a random basis. Even then, a room inspection can not take more than 5-10 minutes max. When I had to do this task, it was like a frickin' game. Finally I resorted to random, but high intensity inspections. I would pick rooms on a semi-random basis (making sure everyone got a turn), start with 20 $1 bills and subtract one for every deficiency found. This worked like a dream, but later my short-term penny pinching bosses nixed it.
Disposable is better on almost all levels except for the landfill part. Recycled paper cups would be best. Not sure it was mentioned anywhere, but the coffee urns are also a "hot zone". Most places, the urn never leaves the room.
Anyway, we started with real glasses per corporate standards requirements and the logistics of maintaining a constantly shrinking inventory on each floor of spotless glasses challenged us daily. In the end, we switched to logoed plastic and took the penalty on the corporate quality assurance scores. You know, all for the health of the guests.
The spray/blue liquid for washing the glasses is a bit of a red herring. You wouldn't drink home dishwashing detergent, would you? As long as the glass is rinsed well, the unusual liquid in itself should be no problem.
The rest of the report is right on target, though. The health department should throw the book at the hotels, assuming there's no bribery going on.
For washing the glasses yourself, the individually wrapped hand soap and hot water should be enough. TV remote? Don't wash it, put it in a plastic bag.




















Between that, the bed bugs, and the 'protein stains', I have come to the firm conclusion that hotel rooms are just plain nasty.
They DO change the sheets between visitors, right?