{"id":2604,"date":"2026-03-09T10:02:50","date_gmt":"2026-03-09T10:02:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/fly-away\/?p=2604"},"modified":"2026-03-06T11:02:53","modified_gmt":"2026-03-06T11:02:53","slug":"resort_fees_explained_which_option_saves_money_and_suits_your_needs-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/fly-away\/resort_fees_explained_which_option_saves_money_and_suits_your_needs-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Resort Fees Explained: Which Option Saves Money and Suits Your Needs"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Understanding Resort Fees: How That $120 Room Becomes $153<\/h2>\n<figure><img src=\"http:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/dxpavcjob\/image\/upload\/v1772794902\/j30dqjcefeqmc8pnevkb.jpg\" alt=\"Resort fees example paperwork\"><figcaption>Photo credit: CheapFareGuru<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p> Resort fees\u2014sometimes called \u201cdestination fees\u201d or \u201cfacility charges\u201d\u2014aren\u2019t bundled into the base nightly rate you see on most booking sites. Instead, they\u2019re tacked on at check-in or check-out, covering everything from Wi-Fi to pool towels, parking, or even local phone calls, whether you use these perks or not.<\/p>\n<p> Here\u2019s why hotels add them: Properties in places like Las Vegas, Miami Beach, or Orlando claim resort fees help maintain amenities and grounds, pay for extra services, and \u201cenhance the guest experience.\u201d In practice, it also lets hotels advertise deceptively low nightly rates while collecting more cash at the door. This split-pricing makes comparing hotels harder\u2014especially if you don\u2019t spot the fine print.<\/p>\n<p> Actual math: In February 2026, the Tropicana Las Vegas listed a King Room at $119 per night (base rate), but added a $34.99\/night resort fee on top. For a 3-night stay, that\u2019s $119 x 3 + $34.99 x 3 = $461.97 before taxes. Several guests, like Priya Malhotra, IT consultant from Toronto, posted on Reddit that they only learned about the extra $104.97 in fees when reviewing their confirmation emails.<\/p>\n<p> Most travelers ask the same question: can you avoid resort fees? In almost every case\u2014no, unless you have certain elite status or book with points at a handful of loyalty programs (Hyatt waives them on points stays as of March 2026). The deal is, even if you never use the gym or lounge by the pool, you\u2019ll still pay.<\/p>\n<p> I track these charges through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a>\u2019s alerts before booking. No one likes booking a $120 hotel and seeing the final bill jump 25% on checkout\u2014that&#8217;s why it pays to double-check the breakdown every time.<\/p>\n<h2>Resort Fees From $12 to $75\u2014What That Covers (And What It Doesn\u2019t)<\/h2>\n<figure><img src=\"http:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/dxpavcjob\/image\/upload\/v1772794899\/jil1lvkgthnapujjvi93.jpg\" alt=\"Hotel pool and amenities\"\/><figcaption>Photo credit: Unsplash<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Checking into a budget hotel in Las Vegas? Expect resort fees starting at $12\u2013$27 per night. For example, as of January 2026, the Excalibur on the Strip charges $29.95\/night, tacking on basic Wi-Fi, local calls, and gym access. Over at the Holiday Inn Express (East Village, San Diego), the fee is $17.50\/night\u2014includes breakfast and Wi-Fi, but not parking. These fees aren\u2019t optional, and they stack up quick. Two nights adds $35\u2013$60, not counting taxes.<\/p>\n<p>Luxury gets pricier. The Bellagio in Vegas, as of February 2026, posts a $52.94 nightly resort fee. You get Wi-Fi (premium speed), full spa and gym access, pool entry, and local\/toll-free calls. The Ritz-Carlton, Key Biscayne (Miami) clocks in at $75\/night: this bundles in two lounge chairs, umbrella, fitness center, and \u201cresort activities\u201d\u2014but notorious for not including parking (that\u2019s another $45\/day).<\/p>\n<p>Here\u2019s what you\u2019re typically paying for in these add-on charges, regardless of hotel tier:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Wi-Fi (standard speed at budget, higher at luxury)<\/li>\n<li>Fitness center or gym entry<\/li>\n<li>Pool access<\/li>\n<li>Local\/1-800 calls<\/li>\n<li>Shuttle services (usually to\/from airport or local attractions, mostly midscale\/budget chains)<\/li>\n<li>Beach chairs\/umbrellas (at resorts, higher-end properties)<\/li>\n<li>Bottled water, coffee, or \u201cwelcome drinks\u201d (select hotels, check the fine print!)<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Example time: Sasha Goldberg, project manager from Toronto, booked the Linq Hotel Las Vegas, December 2025. Her $22.80\/night fee covered gym, Wi-Fi, pool, but didn\u2019t include parking or late checkout\u2014she paid $45 more to keep her car past 1 pm. On the flip: James Hong, freelance designer from Los Angeles, paid a $61.60 resort fee at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach in January 2026. The fee covered access to three pools, the spa\u2019s relaxation area, beach loungers, and high-speed Wi-Fi\u2014everything except the cabanas (those run $200+ per day extra).<\/p>\n<p>If you\u2019re scanning rates on <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a>, factor in these nightly extras up front. I\u2019ve watched even \u201cdeal\u201d hotel rates turn pricey once the non-negotiable fees hit the final bill. The deal is, always use the \u201cresort fee\u201d filter or check the hotel\u2019s policy page for a line-by-line breakdown before you click book. Real talk: comparing amenities against the nightly fees saves bigger headaches than debating standard vs. deluxe room upgrades.<\/p>\n<h2>City vs. Beach: Which Guests Actually Get Value from Resort Fees?<\/h2>\n<figure><img src=\"http:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/dxpavcjob\/image\/upload\/v1772794895\/wi5qlheucby0nq85ve9s.jpg\" alt=\"Hotel pool with guests relaxing\" width=\"100%\"><figcaption>Photo credit: CheapFareGuru<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Families with two or more kids (think Chicago in July) are the ones who wring every drop of value from resort fees\u2014especially when those fees include unlimited pool access, daily breakfast, and activities. Take the Carter family, teachers from St. Louis: Their stay at Orlando\u2019s Wyndham Grand (February 2026) included a $47\/night resort fee. For that, they got four breakfast vouchers daily, two hours of free kayak rentals, poolside games, and movie nights\u2014worth $110\/day versus the $47 they paid. Straight up, they couldn\u2019t have piecemealed those perks for less.<\/p>\n<p>Now compare that to solo business travelers like Lena Zhou, a consultant from Seattle, who picked the Thompson Central Park, NYC in February 2026. The $40\/night fee covered Wi-Fi, access to a basic gym, and \u201ccomplimentary\u201d morning coffee. Lena noted on FlyerTalk: \u201cI worked all day, used the Wi-Fi (which should be free anyway), and left at sunrise. The rest was wasted on me.\u201d Total value she used? Maybe $10\/day.<\/p>\n<p>Location flips the math fast. Urban properties, especially in places like Manhattan or San Francisco, often tack on resort fees for amenities you may not use\u2014or wouldn\u2019t pay for separately, like \u201cbusiness center access\u201d or morning yoga. Actual spend saved can be as low as $0 if you\u2019re out exploring all day.<\/p>\n<p>Beach and resort-area hotels, though, bundle in activities and perks that guests actually seek out: snorkel gear, shuttle rides to local attractions, or kids\u2019 clubs. Tara Patel, a nurse from Toronto, posted on Reddit about her Honolulu resort stay in January 2026\u2014$62 nightly fee, but she used surf lessons (retail $80), daily breakfast ($34), and kids\u2019 crafts ($20): \u201cWorth every penny. I\u2019d pay double if I had to price these out on my own.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The deal is, you\u2019ve got to match the fee to your travel style. If you plan to spend hours at the pool, breakfast buffet, or spa, those charges stack up in your favor. If you\u2019re a city explorer who\u2019s barely in the room, you\u2019re basically funding someone else\u2019s mimosa brunch. I track resort fee inclusions for every trip\u2014<a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a> flags fee breakdowns if you click \u201csee details\u201d before booking. Don\u2019t just assume; always check.<\/p>\n<h2>Resort Fees: Display Rules and Refund Traps on Flexible Bookings<\/h2>\n<figure><img src=\"http:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/dxpavcjob\/image\/upload\/v1772794892\/hjw7tnqd47dqjsasuokf.jpg\" alt=\"Hotel front desk with key cards and paperwork\"><figcaption>Photo credit: Unsplash<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p> No two hotels handle resort fees the same way\u2014especially when it comes to showing you the real total before you book. On <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a> and most third-party sites, you\u2019ll usually see a small asterisk and fine print mentioning \u201ctaxes and fees extra\u201d on the rate screen. But those fees often stay hidden until you\u2019re one step away from checkout. Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe (December 2025): $169\/night for base room, but $39\/night mandatory resort fee added only on the final page. That\u2019s $312 extra for an 8-night stay\u2014easy to miss if you\u2019re price comparing too quickly.<\/p>\n<p> Here\u2019s where things get messy: resort fees are almost never refundable, even if the base rate is. Serifina Morales, event planner from Orlando, canceled her 5-night Bellagio Las Vegas booking (January 2026) four days before arrival. The cash room rate ($1,190) was refunded, but $225 in resort fees were not. That\u2019s spelled out in the cancellation policy\u2014buried in paragraph three below the fold. Bottom line: a \u201cfree cancellation\u201d badge doesn\u2019t always mean you\u2019ll get your full deposit back.<\/p>\n<p> If you want to dodge this kind of surprise, don\u2019t rely on bolded headlines or \u201cTotal Price\u201d promises. Real talk: always expand those terms and conditions before confirming anything, and call the front desk to verify fee amounts for your exact dates. I\u2019ve seen some travelers catch late-posted resort fee increases ($32\/night jumps to $49\/night for holiday weekends) just by double-checking before payment. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a> now flags nightly fees at checkout, but I still recommend screenshotting the details or getting an emailed quote with all charges broken out.<\/p>\n<h2>7 Sneaky Hotel Fees That Add $50+ to Your Bill<\/h2>\n<p>Hotels don\u2019t stop at resort fees. Start with valet parking\u2014$42\/night at the Boston Marriott Copley in January 2026. Then there\u2019s the \u201curban destination fee\u201d (saw $29\/night at Hilton San Francisco Union Square last November), or \u201crecreation taxes\u201d added on top of base rates. Some properties push a \u201cresort credit\u201d you pay upfront (like $35\/night in Nassau) and quietly attach mandatory tips on top. Incidental deposit holds can also eat $100\u2013$200 of your available balance per stay, sometimes taking up to a week to release.<\/p>\n<p>Last August, Karina Salazar, a school administrator from Tucson, booked the Flamingo Las Vegas for 4 nights ($392 base rate) and was hit with $51 in parking fees and a $139 resort charge. She only discovered the parking charge after reviewing her folio post-checkout\u2014so, not even at the front desk. Total: $582 out of pocket, not the $392 she\u2019d seen at booking. Straight up: hotels count on you missing the fine print.<\/p>\n<p>Don\u2019t accept every incidental as legit. Before hitting \u201cbook,\u201d check the amenities list, then scan confirmation emails for extra charges in small type. The deal is, confirmation emails usually back up whatever\u2019s on the booking page\u2014so if a fee appears only at checkout, that\u2019s leverage. More than once, I\u2019ve had those dropped by showing the discrepancy at the lobby.<\/p>\n<p>Another easy trick: call the property (not a generic brand number) and ask direct. \u201cIs there a resort fee, recreation tax, or parking charge I haven\u2019t seen in the confirmation?\u201d If you get a vague answer, consider a different hotel\u2014or bring the email copy to the front desk and push back.<\/p>\n<p>I track added fees, especially if <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a> flags a suspiciously low initial rate. In January 2026, they spotted a no-resort-fee promo at the Sheraton Atlanta\u2014found the subtext about $15\/night service taxes buried four clicks deep. Calling revealed a $50 refundable incidental hold, not mentioned online. Catch these details upfront, and your final bill won\u2019t blindside you.<\/p>\n<h2>Which Option Provides the Best Value? Resort Fees vs. No-Fee Hotels vs. Rentals<\/h2>\n<figure><img src=\"http:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/dxpavcjob\/image\/upload\/v1772794888\/jl8yrpuluzdbpj74b3mv.jpg\" alt=\"Vacation Rental or Hotel?\"\/><figcaption>Credit: Erik Odiin \/ Unsplash<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p> Let\u2019s get real: Resort fees can quietly wreck your hotel budget. Whether they\u2019re $34.71 at an Orlando Marriott (January 2026) or $53.20 at a Las Vegas Strip property, those nightly add-ons creep up fast. Not everyone needs all the \u201cextras\u201d these fees supposedly cover. But sometimes, the value is actually there\u2014if you care about the right amenities.<\/p>\n<p> Take Chris Nguyen, freelance designer from San Jose, who booked three nights at a Miami Beach hotel in December 2025. The room itself ran $486.60, but the resort fee ($42.75\/night, total $128.25) actually brought legit value: it covered beachside loungers (normally $30\/day), two daily cocktails ($19 each), and high-speed Wi-Fi. Chris told me via DM, \u201cIf I booked a no-fee spot, I\u2019d have paid more for the same stuff.\u201d So in his case\u2014worth it.<\/p>\n<p> Now compare that to Amy Patel, accountant from Chicago, who stayed in New York\u2019s Midtown last November. Her hotel added a $35.20\/night resort fee. Wi-Fi was slow, \u201cfree\u201d breakfast was dry pastries, and the \u201cfitness center\u201d was a tiny room with one treadmill. Amy posted on Reddit: \u201cI picked the hotel for the price, but the fee gave me nothing I needed. Wish I\u2019d rented an apartment nearby for $124 less and way more space.\u201d<\/p>\n<p> Vacation rentals (think Airbnb or Vrbo) are all over the map on value. Some charge sneaky cleaning fees, but no per-night resort charges. You might save big, especially if you\u2019re traveling with kids or want a kitchen. For example, in Scottsdale: a 2-bedroom condo rental (December 2025) totaled $713 for three nights with $95 cleaning but zero resort fees\u2014$173 less than two hotel rooms with $22\/night fees each.<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Need daily housekeeping, on-site restaurants, and gym access?<\/strong> Hotels (even with fees) might be worth it.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Traveling with family, need a kitchen or laundry, or want space to spread out?<\/strong> Rentals or suites at no-fee properties save money and fit your lifestyle.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Tight budget, just want a clean bed and Wi-Fi with no surprises?<\/strong> No-fee hotels or motels are your friend\u2014just double-check for add-ons.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p> Here\u2019s what I do: I track promos through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a>\u2019s alerts for both hotels and short-term rentals\u2014sometimes a flash hotel deal offsets those annoying fees, or a rental price drops last minute.<\/p>\n<p> Bottom line: Run the real numbers for your trip. List out which amenities you\u2019ll actually use, check every line of the bill (including tax on fees), and compare total cost. Resort fees aren\u2019t all bad\u2014but sometimes you\u2019re just paying extra for a pool you\u2019ll never see.<\/p>\n<h2>FAQ on Resort Fees: Real Answers with Numbers and Workarounds<\/h2>\n<p><strong>What are resort fees, and why do hotels charge them?<\/strong><br \/> Resort fees are mandatory daily charges\u2014often $30\u2013$60 per night\u2014added at checkout for use of gym, Wi-Fi, \u201cresort amenities,\u201d or pool access. Hotels claim it covers extras, but it\u2019s often to show a lower nightly rate on booking sites. In New York, the average resort fee in June 2025 was $43.70 per night for 4-star properties.<\/p>\n<p><strong>How to identify resort fees before booking?<\/strong><br \/> Always check the payment breakdown page right before payment. OTAs like Expedia and booking engines often show resort fees in smaller text after taxes, not in the headline rate. I usually track last-minute deals through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a>\u2014their booking summary highlighted a $177.12 total for 3 nights in Las Vegas (Feb 2026) but flagged a $102 resort fee at checkout.<\/p>\n<p><strong>When should travelers avoid hotels with resort fees?<\/strong><br \/> If your trip is short (1\u20132 nights) or you won\u2019t use pool, parking, or spa\u2014skip properties with extra charges. Families in Orlando, Feb 2025: Tara Patel from Houston was surprised when her \u201c$98\/night\u201d hotel cost $148.50\/night after resort fees\u2014booking a non-resort-fee hotel nearby saved her $201 over 4 nights.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Can resort fees be negotiated or waived?<\/strong><br \/> Sometimes, but don\u2019t bank on it. Hotels occasionally waive them if amenities are closed or if you explain you won\u2019t use any included services. John Murray, IT consultant, Seattle, posted on FlyerTalk (Jan 2026): front desk removed a $38\/night fee after he showed gym\/pool closures during his 2-night NYC stay. Never hurts to ask.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Why do some budget hotels also charge resort fees?<\/strong><br \/> Budget chains in cities like Las Vegas, Orlando, and Atlantic City add resort fees to stay competitive on listing sites\u2014the \u201cbase\u201d price looks cheaper, but fees drive up total cost. Example: Downtown Las Vegas Super 8, March 2025\u2014advertised at $41\/night, but actually $64.85\/night after a $23.85 resort fee.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What\u2019s the impact of resort fees on cancellation policies?<\/strong><br \/> Resort fees are normally refunded if you cancel within the hotel\u2019s policy window. But double-check: Amanda Chen (UX designer, Toronto) in November 2025 booked a Miami stay through CheapFareGuru. She canceled 4 days before arrival; her $111.24 in resort charges were refunded along with her $417 room total.<\/p>\n<p><strong>How can I best budget for resort fees during vacation planning?<\/strong><br \/> Add $35\u2013$55\/night on hotel stays in major resort-heavy markets like Las Vegas, Hawaii, Orlando, and New York if booking hotels with fees. Some sites (including CheapFareGuru) show a detailed payment summary at checkout\u2014always confirm \u201ctotal with all taxes\/fees.\u201d I keep a running note on my phone for all trip add-on costs; saved me $152 unplanned last December in Oahu.<\/p>\n<h2>Making Smart Accommodation Choices with Resort Fees<\/h2>\n<p>Resort fees aren&#8217;t going away. From that $44 daily \u201camenities\u201d charge in Las Vegas (on top of your $68 room rate) to $25 \u201cdestination fees\u201d in New York, missing the fine print can wreck your budget fast. The difference is in how you prep\u2014and managing these extra costs is about consistency, not luck.<\/p>\n<p>Don\u2019t wait until check-in to get specifics. I\u2019ve seen too many travelers booking blindly, only to find out about mandatory fees hidden deep in the terms. Always check a hotel\u2019s direct website for exact fee breakdowns; call the front desk with questions\u2014even a quick two-minute call often gets you more honest answers than any booking engine FAQ.<\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s what works: Run the total price math before you book. Compare options by checking if resort fees cover things you&#8217;ll actually use (like parking or gym access) or just Wi-Fi you don\u2019t need. And if a booking platform isn\u2019t showing fees upfront, consider that a red flag. I track deals and fee changes through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a>\u2014their booking flow flags hidden charges, so you\u2019re not surprised after checkout.<\/p>\n<p>Bottom line: Ask questions. Make direct comparisons. Build fees into your nightly rate math, not after. The deal is, you don\u2019t have to let resort fees derail your travel plans\u2014you just need to go in eyes open. For hotels and flights where fees stay crystal clear, see what we can offer for your travel needs AirTkt.<\/p>\n<h2>5 Authoritative Resources Every Traveler Should Bookmark<\/h2>\n<p> You don\u2019t need to keep random blogs in your bookmarks bar. The real scoop on air travel\u2014security, policy changes, flight rights\u2014always comes from official sites. For security and checkpoint rules, head to the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.tsa.gov\/\">TSA<\/a>. If you want flight safety, airspace, and drone advice, the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.faa.gov\/\">FAA<\/a> breaks it down. Industry trends and travel research? That&#8217;s the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ustravel.org\/\">U.S. Travel Association<\/a> wheelhouse. For international regulations, refer to <a href=\"https:\/\/www.iata.org\/\">IATA<\/a> and for consumer protections, the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.transportation.gov\/\">U.S. Department of Transportation<\/a> (DOT) keeps its rules updated as of March 2026. I track travel policy updates alongside deal alerts from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/\">CheapFareGuru<\/a>\u2014not missing either is key.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Understand resort fees thoroughly to choose accommodation that saves you money and meets your travel needs. Learn about pricing, amenities, guest types, and booking tips.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":2606,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[72],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v16.0.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Resort Fees Explained: Which Option Saves Money and Suits Your Needs - Fly Away<\/title>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.cheapfareguru.com\/fly-away\/resort_fees_explained_which_option_saves_money_and_suits_your_needs-2\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Resort Fees Explained: Which Option Saves Money and Suits Your Needs - Fly Away\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Understand resort fees thoroughly to choose accommodation that saves you money and meets your travel needs. 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