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Why I’m fed up with free hotel minibars

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‘Free’ minibars have become a selling point at certain hotel brands. Examples include Hyatt’s Andaz and IHG’s Hotel Indigo.

Why? Well, apart from reducing the effort required to ensure minibars are fully stocked and accounted for, the real reason is that it is very hard to tell the difference between most upscale hotel brands these days.

An easy way to differentiate your brand is with a benefit such as a free minibar. It’s a feature you can roll-out brand-wide very easily and it’s easy for the customer to understand.

I’m sick of them, though.

Free hotel minibar

Take a look at the photo above.

I am typing this in a luxury hotel room in Oman which, with taxes and service, will come to over £750 per night.

One of the ‘benefits’ of this resort is a free minibar.

Let’s take a look inside and see what I get for my £750 per night. Hmm ….

  • two cans of regular full sugar Coke
  • two cans of regular full sugar Sprite
  • four capsules of milk for the coffee machine

That’s it. Bizarrely, the room comes with a full set of wine glasses even though no wine is available.

It’s a joke. It’s actually a dis-benefit to me:

  • I’ve no interest in full sugar soft drinks
  • at this particular resort, I am a decent walk away from the main building where all of the F&B options are – to get anything else is a real drag
  • I am in a room with a lovely balcony and a great view – yet there’s nothing I want to drink whilst sat out there
  • there are no light snacks for me or the children, which would be handy as we are basically eating the huge free breakfast, one additional meal and then snacking our way through the rest of the day

What should a hotel minibar look like?

I think the last time I wrote about minibars was when I reviewed Virgin Hotels Edinburgh earlier this year.

This is what I wrote at the time:

I should mention the minibar, including a Smeg fridge. The hotel has clearly paid someone heavily to ‘curate’ a minibar experience. To some extent it doesn’t even matter what it contained – all you need to know is that the items on display were all achingly cool food and drink brands.

minibar Virgin Hotels Edinburgh

Open the fridge and there was – amongst many other items – a can of Tennents lager (ok, not exactly ‘cool’) with a bottle of Veuve Cliquot sitting next to a bottle of Irn-Bru.

Even the coffee was cool, coming in posh coffee bags. Only the cartons of UHT milk spoiled the look. Two free Tunnock’s Caramel bars were provided to accompany your tea or coffee.

minibar Virgin Hotels Edinburgh

I know this all sounds a bit silly but someone had probably spent weeks putting all these brands together. The fact that I didn’t touch any of the paid stuff was immaterial.

If you look at what Virgin Hotels Edinburgh offered, none of it was free – except the Caramel bar – but it sent a real signal about the hotel and its sense of style. For someone who was keen to tuck in, there was a lot to go for.

Compare the images above to the empty fridge at the top of the page. When you’re paying £750 per night, you should expect – if the minibar is free – to have a range of options as wide as any paid-for minibar, at least on the soft drinks side. (I accept that as we’re in the Middle East I should not expect a fridge full of alcohol, free or not, and neither do I need it.)

It should also be painfully clear that someone paying £750 per night can afford items from a hotel minibar, and may even be prepared to splash out on more upmarket or esoteric options.

Frankly, I’ve stayed at 3-star hotels with free minibars with a better selection than I have in my current resort. The free minibar isn’t a benefit to me – it is actually causing me inconvenience as I need to head over to the main building for anything I need and can’t buy basic snacks there at all. I think substantially less of the resort for offering it.

It’s sad that this specific hotel, which will get a full review soon, doesn’t have the imagination – it’s certainly not short of budget – to put something together that would really impress the guests.

If you have any recommendations for hotels with genuinely impressive free minibars, let us know in the comments.

Rant over!


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Comments (179)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • r* says:

    I dont like stocked miniibars as I’m never going to use anything from it and then theres no space to put my own stuff in them. At least the free minibars are guaranteed to be half empty.

  • Gordon says:

    When in Vegas, Whatever you do….
    DO NOT OPEN THE MINIBAR OR TOUCH SNACKS ON THE DESK!

    • Jonathan says:

      It is sin city you’re talking about here, but Las Vegas is known for taking mini bars to a different level, the hotels are too large, people can’t be bothered too leave their hotels rooms to get a snack !

      • Gordon says:

        I was there 6 months ago and believe me I was bothered to take a 20 min walk to get a coffee and snack. And I spent little time in my room. After all it’s sin city.

  • TGLoyalty says:

    I’d just go to a supermarket and buy what I want to fill the empty fridge.

    Regardless of paying £1k per night

  • the_real_a says:

    Having stayed at the new Hampton, Garden Inn etc hotels across Europe, i couldn’t understand why my fresh milk turned into yoghurt in a day or so. Googling the model number, the new smart SMEG “fridges” were NOT fridges, they were coolers… so on hot days left the mini-fridge at 10-12oC.

    Im sure some of these brands are limited in what they can do – because someone in the design house was an idiot.

  • HH says:

    Shangri-La Le Touessrok Mauritius wins best free minibar from my travels for the sheer range of drinks and savoury/sweet snacks they replenished daily in my frangipani junior suite.

  • HH says:

    Honorary mention to the Anantara Layan Phuket for the mind-boggling giant fruit basket they presented me with during a short stay in a base villa. I’m a real exotic fruit aficionado and to this day I still don’t know what a third of those fruits were, but I sure enjoyed eating them!

  • DavidB says:

    Being Oman, a Muslim country, was there not a note explaining you can order a full minibar with alcohol (so as not to offend Islamic guests)?

    As for the Virgin minibar, quite over the top and you’d certainly be paying for the cost of a SMED fridge @£500, let alone the drinks themselves!

  • Iain says:

    It’s becoming increasingly popular for All Inclusives to have in-room fridges stocked with “free” stuff. They’re beginning to understand that folk quaffing £1-a-can beers or a 50p chocolate bar in their rooms keeps them away from gorging on the more expensive stuff in the resort.

    My preference for a hotel fridge is free water and that’s it. The rest of the space is used up by whatever I buy in a local shop and want to keep cold.

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