Booked a $179/night hotel in Las Vegas lately? Add at least $39.99 per night at check-in—that’s a standard resort fee at dozens of big-name properties as of February 2026. Most travelers spot the “total” charge for their stay after tax, but overlook these extra line items until checkout. Real talk: Resort fees aren’t just annoying—they can completely shift the math on what seems like a budget-friendly stay.
So what actually counts as a resort fee? It’s a mandatory nightly charge—added on top of the base room rate—supposedly for “extra amenities.” They go by many names: destination fee, facility fee, amenity fee, urban fee. But it doesn’t matter what label the hotel uses; the effect is the same. They inflate your total bill and can turn a cheap-looking $149 stay into $202/night once taxes and fees stack up.
If you’re tracking dollars as closely as I am, ignoring resort fees will wreck your travel budget. Here’s why: These fees are nearly impossible to waive, rarely included in loyalty program redemptions (unless you have top-tier status), and hit you at thousands of properties in the US and Caribbean. I use CheapFareGuru to hunt for deals, but even they can’t erase those surprise fees. You need to spot them before you book.
What do these charges actually “cover”? Usually a grab bag of things many guests never use:
Here’s the thing: sometimes resort fees give you real value—like a shuttle in Oahu that would cost $30/day alone. Other times you’re just paying for Wi-Fi that should’ve been free. The rest of this article breaks down which types of properties charge these fees, how to compare actual prices (not just sticker rates), and what tricks do or don’t work to avoid paying them. I’ll run through examples—like how Mariam Begum, a UX designer from Chicago, was hit with $287 in surprise fees during her five-night Miami trip in December 2025—and show when resort fees might actually make sense if you use everything they include.
Miami and Las Vegas hotels love their resort fees, but the numbers jump around fast. As of February 2026, average daily resort fees break down like this:
International resorts (Bali, Phuket) go lighter: $9–$18, often called “service charges” instead. In Paris or London, you won’t generally see U.S.-style resort fees—look for straight-up VAT or city taxes, usually $3–$7 per night, and rarely “resort” extras.
What are you getting for your fee? The list barely changes, no matter the star rating:
Here’s the thing: resort fees do not usually cover the real extras like parking (expect $25–$50 more per night, especially in San Diego or New York), early/late check-in, or room upgrades. Compare this to legacy “service charges”—old school hotels in London or Rome often add $7–$13 for housekeeping or “porterage,” but they’re more up-front and lower as a percentage.
Season matters. Resort fees climb with demand—just look at December versus July pricing in Miami Beach. Marissa Feldman, event coordinator from Dallas, paid $49.87 at Fontainebleau for a three-night New Year’s stay in December 2025; the same room dropped to $42.04 in mid-May 2025, according to her CheapFareGuru rate tracker. Las Vegas gets pricier during CES (Jan 2026: $59/night at The Venetian) and Halloween weekends.
Here’s a region-by-category snapshot:
| Region | Luxury Hotels | Midscale Hotels |
|---|---|---|
| East Coast (Miami, NYC, Orlando) | $41–$52 | $24–$38 |
| West Coast (LA, San Diego, Hawaii) | $38–$50 | $26–$38 |
| Las Vegas Strip | $45–$59 | $34–$38 |
| International (Cancún, Caribbean) | $34–$55 | $18–$35 |
| Asia (Bali, Thailand) | $12–$18* | $9–$15* |
*Usually called “service charge” or rolled into taxes—less likely to break out “resort fee.
Bottom line: build in another $28–$59/night for U.S. resorts, tack on $25–$50/night if you’re parking a car, and check if any “tacked-on” daily fees really cover what you’d use. When I track deals with CheapFareGuru alerts, I always scan line-by-line—actual amenities rarely differ, no matter what they promise at check-in.
Call it what it is: a “resort fee” can mean another $35–$55 per night added to your bill, depending on where you stay. But not every type of accommodation goes this route—or targets the same traveler. Here’s a side-by-side look at resorts, standard hotels, boutique hotels, and vacation rentals, with how fees and guest preferences line up.
| Type | Typical Resort Fee Practice (2026) | Guest Profile Most Common | Where You’ll See These |
|---|---|---|---|
| Resorts | $35–$65/night mandatory, covers “activities, WiFi, pools” | Families, package tourists, groups | Las Vegas, Miami Beach, Hawaii, Cancun |
| Standard Hotels (Chains) | $15–$35/night in select cities, or no fee outside big destinations | Business travelers, solo vacationers | Orlando, New York City, San Diego |
| Boutique Hotels | $10–$40/night, sometimes branded as “amenity fee” or “urban fee” | Couples, young professionals, design-focused guests | New Orleans, San Francisco, Austin |
| Vacation Rentals | Cleaning fees ($75–$200/stay), rarely resort fees unless part of a complex | Groups, budget travelers, those needing kitchen or longer stays | Anywhere—city centers, beach towns, ski resorts |
Families chasing pool days and activities? Resorts make sense—everything’s on property, and the resort fee (while steep) usually passes with a shrug if it means daily kids’ clubs or unlimited soda. The McMillans from Calgary, who booked the Grand Wailea Maui in December 2025, told me the $60/night resort fee “felt fair only because we maxed out the included cabana access, water park, and ‘free’ ice cream for the kids.” Turn that on its head: a solo flyer like Ruth Cho, UX designer from Seattle, spent two nights at a Miami Marriott on Feb 3–5, 2026—the $35 resort fee stung because Ruth spent both days off property at meetings and only used WiFi.
Boutique hotels attract couples and travelers who care about vibe and design. Here, the fees are dressed up as “urban experience charges”: rooftop yoga, “free” bikes, a daily $15 craft cocktail. Chris Nguyen, financial analyst from San Jose, split a Valentine’s weekend (Feb 2026) at Austin Proper—$25/night fee, but with one cocktail and a scooter ride each, “they probably got their value.” Still, many boutique guests feel nickeled-and-dimed, especially if they prefer to explore the city instead.
Standard hotels, especially outside classic vacation zones, often skip the extra charges altogether. You’ll usually see zero resort fees at highway-chain Holiday Inns or Courtyard by Marriott, especially near airports. Here’s the thing—this is intentional because business travelers hate mandatory extras on their company tab. In contrast, vacation rentals go fee-lite on a per-night basis, but those bummer $150+ cleaning charges get tacked on—hard for a single night, but divided out over a week, it’s negligible for groups or families.
Why do resort fees pop up in places like Orlando or Hawaii but not Paris or Tokyo? U.S. destination resorts started piling on fees to keep base rates low for search engines. In May 2025 alone, CheapFareGuru flagged four different Miami Beach properties raising resort fees while keeping base rates flat at $189/night—so they’ll “win” the search screen, but you cough up at check-in. Internationally, all-in rates are more common thanks to stricter consumer protection rules.
Bottom line: if you care about pools, resort activities, and convenience, you’re probably in the “just pay it” camp. If you’re prioritizing cheap, flexible, or no-frills stays, stick with standard hotels in non-tourist hubs or check for short-term rental deals. I track potential hidden fee changes using CheapFareGuru‘s hotel search filters—compare your nightly totals, not just the flashy headline price.
Booking a hotel that tacks on a $35/night resort fee isn’t unusual, but what’s rarely obvious: the terms around that fee can change how hard it is to change or cancel your plans. Here’s what gets travelers—those fees can be rolled into your prepaid booking, paid on arrival, or sometimes even split between both. That small detail can make a big difference in whether you get your money back.
For example, Hilton’s Advance Purchase rates in January 2026 require full prepayment, and the resort fee (often $42.50/night at Honolulu’s Hilton Hawaiian Village) gets charged up front too. Cancel—even a week out? You’ll usually lose both your room rate and the prepaid fee, since the booking policy calls the whole thing “non-refundable.” Compare that to the same room at the Hyatt Regency Waikiki, where the $45 resort fee is always charged at check-in, separate from your base rate. There, you can often cancel up to 72 hours before arrival (as listed on their direct site in February 2026) and walk away without losing anything—even if you prepaid the room rate itself through an online travel agency.
Smaller properties throw in more curveballs. At the Dream Midtown in New York, posted on Booking.com for February 2026, the $39 “facility fee” is always listed as “to be paid at the property.” They’ll charge the first night’s room plus tax as a deposit, but even if you cancel on time, some guests (Minh Tran, software engineer from Toronto, shared on Reddit) reported in January 2026 being charged the facility fee anyway after a last-minute cancellation—despite what was in the fine print. Boutique hotels are far less standardized with how resort fees attach to cancellation deadlines or non-refundable rates, so you need to read booking screens and confirmation emails carefully before you commit.
Here’s why it matters: if you prepay a resort or facilities fee, you’re almost always risking that cash in a no-show or forced trip change—even if your reason is valid. If you pay at check-in, a pre-trip emergency might cost you only the base room rate (or nothing at all, if your booking had a flexible cancellation window).
Locking in the fee rate pre-arrival sometimes protects you against mid-season price hikes. But it adds risk: if rates drop, or you cancel, that prepayment may never come back. Paying at check-in gives you one last bit of flexibility, especially when weather or work plans get in the way. Straight up, if you’re on the fence about firm plans: keep the resort fee off your credit card until you’re 100% sure you’ll be rolling up to the desk.
I track changes in these policies with email alerts and screenshots, plus cross-check against CheapFareGuru and hotel direct sites every few weeks. Rules move fast—even within the same brand—so always double-check before you hit “book.” Risks go down if you see “pay at property” and free cancellation in writing on your confirmation.
Resorts have a habit of slipping in fees that don’t show up until you’re staring at the bill. The advertised nightly rate—say $179 in Las Vegas, March 2025—rarely covers everything. Start adding up resort fees, parking, Wi-Fi, and “complimentary” activities, and you can blow past an $80+ extra per night. I’ve seen it happen a dozen times, but let’s get into the specifics so you can dodge these wallet traps.
Let’s talk about the worst offenders:
The deal is, these extras show up after you book. You click “Reserve” thinking it’s $139/night, but checkout adds $49 (fee), $32 (parking), $12 (Wi-Fi). Suddenly, that $417 weekend hit $602—happened to Rachel Kim, graphic designer from Seattle, at the MGM Grand, January 2026. She posted the breakdown on FlyerTalk after her “deal” turned into a $185 surprise.
Want to spot these fees before they wreck your budget? Here’s what works:
Another example: Tomás Rivera, civil engineer from Miami, stayed at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach in December 2025. Reservation quoted $260/night. His checkout bill showed $53/night resort fee plus $42/night for parking—total bill: $355/night, an extra $258 over his five-night stay. He could have avoided $210 by choosing The Palms Hotel up the street with no resort charge and free parking (verified via forum review before booking).
Look, hotel chains bank on you ignoring the fine print. I track price drops and fees using CheapFareGuru—the rate alert emails sometimes flag when all-in pricing changes. If you see “plus taxes/fees” without a number, that’s a cue to dig deeper.
Bottom line: set your real budget by adding $40–$90/night for potential extras, or better yet, stay somewhere upfront with zero resort fees. It’s not glamorous, but your wallet won’t care.
You’ll find resort fees ranging from $25 to $75 per night at major chains in Las Vegas, Orlando, and Miami. Here’s the thing—not everyone actually gets value from those add-on charges. The best call boils down to how much you actually use the included perks.
Let’s look at real-life math: Stephanie Lim, software engineer from Toronto, booked the MGM Grand in Las Vegas for 4 nights last December. Base rate: $108 per night. Resort fee: $45 per night. Her crew hit the gym each morning, spent three afternoons at the pool (with included towel and chair service), grabbed free in-room bottled water, and used the hotel’s airport shuttle (normally $18/trip). By the end, she estimated she saved $62 in shuttle costs, $48 in bottled water, and $72 in gym access for two. Subtotal: $182 saved on $180 in fees. For someone maximizing amenities, it actually paid off.
On the flip side, Jonah Primack, grad student in Denver, skipped the pool and gym entirely at a Miami Beach resort in August 2025. He paid $62/night in resort fees over three nights—$186 total. When checked, he never used any of the extras. He could’ve picked a no-fee boutique hotel three blocks away for $49/night more, saving $39 overall and avoiding the daily fee hassle. His verdict: “I’ll take the basics and skip the premium next time.” (Shared on Reddit, September 2025.)
If you’re a pool-time-all-day traveler or love organized resort activities, those fees can actually net out with smart usage. But strictly room sleepers or all-day explorers—no-fee options nearly always come out ahead, especially with vacation rentals through Airbnb or condos directly from owners.
I track variable resort fees and base rates with CheapFareGuru—its real-time totals save time chasing down “hidden” fees. Bottom line: Do your homework (15 minutes tops), and don’t assume “resort” means better value for your actual travel style.
What are resort fees and why are they charged?
Resort fees (sometimes called “amenity fees” or “destination fees”) are mandatory daily charges on top of your room rate. Hotels tack them on to cover extras—think Wi-Fi, gym access, or pool towels—even if you skip those perks. The stated reason? “Maintain quality amenities and services.” Reality check: they mostly boost hotel revenue and make rates look cheaper upfront on booking platforms. For example, the Wynn Las Vegas in January 2026 lists rates at $189/night but charges a non-optional $50.95 nightly resort fee, which you see at checkout, not the search screen.
How do resort fees impact total hotel cost?
These charges add up fast. Jillian Turner, a freelance editor from Portland, booked three nights at the Sheraton Puerto Rico in February 2025: $157/night on the base rate, plus a $45 daily resort fee—so the “deal” she found for $471 ballooned to $606 total. Always check the final price before you pay. I use CheapFareGuru’s detailed fare breakdowns to predict the real nightly cost.
When should travelers expect to pay resort fees—during booking or check-in?
You’ll pay at the hotel, usually when you check in or check out, not up front when reserving. Online booking engines (including CheapFareGuru) increasingly display estimated resort fees at the last step before you confirm. Bottom line: always budget for that extra $25–$55 per night at major resorts.
Can I negotiate or avoid resort fees?
Most big brands (Hilton, Marriott, Caesars) make resort fees non-negotiable. But I’ve seen a few exceptions: Leila Campos, IT consultant from San Diego, shared on FlyerTalk that the Park MGM comped her $44/night fee in April 2025 because the spa was closed—she asked at check-in. Elite status or booking through certain corporate rates can sometimes remove the charge. Real talk: don’t expect much wiggle room unless something’s wrong.
What typical amenities do resort fees cover?
Not all “resort amenities” are actually valuable. I’ve paid $42 for yoga classes—never took one.
How do resort fees vary by destination and accommodation type?
Vegas and Hawaii top the charts—Las Vegas Strip hotels charge between $37–$57/night (as of February 2026). Orlando resorts average $30–$42/night. Small cities and non-chain motels rarely charge resort fees at all. Vacation rentals (like Airbnb) don’t use resort fees but may have “cleaning” costs instead.
Why do some hotels charge resort fees while others don’t?
Major “destination” hotels (think big properties in tourist hubs) use these fees to advertise lower room rates online. Smaller brands or independent hotels often skip them to stay competitive. For example, the Hotel Beacon in New York doesn’t tack on fees as of February 2026, while the Marriott Marquis—three blocks away—charges $35/night. The deal is, always compare final costs before booking, not just the sticker price.
Travelers who skip the fine print on resort fees risk blowing up their trip budget. I’ve seen this firsthand. In January 2026, Brianna Patel, a UX designer from Toronto, booked three nights in Las Vegas—advertised at $87 per night. Total at checkout after resort fees and taxes: $405.43. That’s $144 more than she expected, thrown off by “small print” extras.
Bottom line: you can’t compare hotels on headline rate alone. Any decent budget strategy adds up the room rate, mandatory charges, taxes, and resort fees. What looks cheaper may not be, once you tally it all up. I saw Chris Nguyen, an IT consultant from Seattle, post in a January 2026 FlyerTalk thread about a $59/night Miami Beach deal that ballooned to $104/night at payment after $135 in daily fees for three nights.
Here’s what matters: Always verify total price before you book. Platforms like CheapFareGuru display all taxes and resort fees upfront—no hidden costs at checkout. That’s why I track my own bookings through their system, especially for cities like Orlando or Honolulu where nearly every hotel tacks on extras. Most OTAs still show base rates first; that’s how the hidden fee game survives.
Your short-list should line up full out-the-door prices, not just deals-by-the-night. Read every section of the breakdown (yes, even the footnotes). Factor in what perks you’ll use—pool, gym, Wi-Fi, breakfast—so you’re not subsidizing stuff you never touch. Some travelers want a three-star no-frills place with zero add-ons; others want a splashy pool scene and don’t mind the bundled fee. There’s no universal right answer—just the right answer for you and your trip.
Look, choosing wisely is all about information. Try CheapFareGuru for your next booking and see what we can offer for your travel needs. And remember: one extra minute reading the full cost breakdown can save you $50 to $200 every trip. That’s your airport splurge, not the hotel’s profit.
Get the facts straight from the regulators. For airport security updates, see the TSA. Baggage, liquid rules, and safety policies come from the FAA. Hotel resort fee and rate disclosure requirements: direct from the U.S. Department of Transportation—they track deceptive fee practices. For international hotel regulations, IATA sets global standards. When cross-checking fare rules, I track official advisories alongside CheapFareGuru’s alerts to avoid nasty booking surprises.
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