When Being Cheap Backfires – My Hotel Mistake

We are currently on another road trip to Colorado. We are attempting to climb and summit a few mountains, but we also want to explore different areas we may want to move to. Since we have been going on so many trips lately, I have been looking for different ways to save money. I am a personal…

Michelle Schroeder-Gardner

Last Updated: May 26, 2023

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When Being Cheap Backfires - My Hotel MistakeWe are currently on another road trip to Colorado. We are attempting to climb and summit a few mountains, but we also want to explore different areas we may want to move to.

Since we have been going on so many trips lately, I have been looking for different ways to save money. I am a personal finance blogger after all, so that only makes sense.

So, I found a place the other day. We have been booking everything as we go, and since it was Labor Day weekend, nearly everything was already sold out or extremely overpriced. I found a hotel for $80 a night, and we only wanted to stay there for two nights. Our total damage was $160.

It was a great price when compared to the other places I found in the area for Labor Day weekend.

However, the cheap price was the only good thing about this place. Being cheap though can cost you money. Below are some of the bad things about the place we paid for:

  • The room smelled very bad. Like a dead person… I wish I was exaggerating but it is the truth. We couldn’t breathe because it was so bad and at one point I even had to put my shirt over my nose.
  • The room next door had their door wide open. My dog almost ran inside, so I peaked in and I was horrified. It was filled almost to the ceiling with trash bags and garbage. There was also a crazy pile of shoes that was around four feet high and six feet wide.
  • There was a blood stain and splatters about a foot wide on the carpet right in the middle of our room. It was impossible to miss.
  • There were multiple hairs all over the bed and on the pillows. This means nothing was washed or cleaned when we went in.
  • There were BIG stains all over the bed. Talk about wanting to barf everywhere.
  • The fridge in the room had food stains all over it. It was absolutely disgusting.
  • The pillows were stained yellow.
  • There were multiple brown stains on the wall.
  • The door and window both did not lock. This was scary considering I would be working from the room a lot alone since Wes had plans to do other things.
  • We saw several other people enter their room, only to leave seconds later and not come back.
  • They claimed they had good wifi, but there was not a single person at the hotel and I still couldn’t get a single thing to load. Keep in mind this is important because I work from my laptop.
  • They also claimed they were pet friendly, but when we arrived I noticed that there was no grass. When I asked the person at the front desk, she said there was a park just right around the corner that we could go to with no problem. Well, it turned out the park was four looooong blocks down a busy street and there was no sidewalk there. This meant I had to walk four blocks down a busy street with two dogs and then cross this busy street where there were no sidewalks (not even a curb), streetlights, stop signs, or anything. That is just too dangerous and mean for me to do to my dogs multiple times a day.
  • Lastly, someone claimed they saw a ghost in their room and they panicked. Haha this still makes me laugh but it made me wonder what kind of crazy people were at this hotel.

Wow, it’s just scary writing about everything we saw in the one hour we were there.

We checked in, left to grab something to eat, got back to the room and immediately started finding another place to stay.

At first, I was extremely upset that I prepaid for this place. However, since this was a “vacation,” staying in a place where we literally wanted to throw up just wasn’t going to work.

I found another hotel and booked it as soon as I could. I then walked into the front desk to the gross hotel we were at and checked out immediately.

And this is how being cheap backfired on me. I didn’t want to spend an extra $50 a day in order to stay somewhere “normal” and instead I ended up wasting $160 and a few hours because we couldn’t bare to stay in that hotel for more than a few hours.

I know there are others who are fine with staying anywhere and they only care about having a place to sleep, but I just could not do it. I thought about it for a slight second just because of the money I’d be wasting, but then I realized how crazy that sounded.

Luckily enough, the person checking me in at the next hotel asked where we just came from and how our day was. I explained our horrific story and how I was so glad that they had room for us at their much better hotel. He said he could NOT BELIEVE where we came from and that he knew we must have been horrified because we were actually not the first person who did the exact same thing we did (check in at the bad hotel, only to leave and go to his hotel). He then said he added a discount to our stay and that it was no problem. I told him he didn’t need to but he insisted. Isn’t that awesome?!

Anyway, here are my tips to avoid making a costly mistake like I just did. Being cheap can cost you money!

 

Read the reviews.

I am a serial review reader, so I can honestly say that I read numerous reviews about this hotel. The reviews weren’t the greatest, but it sounded like a lot of people were just used to luxury hotels so I ignored them.

OH MY GOD was that a huge mistake.

From now on, I will always trust bad reviews, especially when there are a ton of them.

 

Compare the pricing.

The other hotels in the area were about $50 more per night. I thought I didn’t want to spend that, so that was the main reason we booked the BAD BAD BAD hotel.

In the end, the $50 extra per night was well worth it.

We received a clean room, a fantastic dog walking area and even a trail along a river to walk our dogs, fast wi-fi, breakfast in the mornings that was actually good, good customer service, and more. We also feel much safer here.

 

Think about how badly you want to save money.

I thought that since it was only two days, that I wouldn’t really care about how cheap the place was. I thought for $80, that the hotel couldn’t possibly be THAT bad, because $80 still isn’t dirt cheap. Considering I’ve stayed in nice hotels in the Caribbean and Florida for around $100 a night, I thought an $80 hotel would be somewhere near average.

Nope, I was wrong. I couldn’t make it an hour so there was no way I would have been able to make it two days.

I didn’t want the savings that bad and I realized that once we arrived at the hotel. This hotel should have been no where near $80 a night. I think it should have been one of those $29.95 highway motels that I often see.

 

Has being cheap backfired on you recently? How much money did you lose?


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Michelle Schroeder-Gardner

Author: Michelle Schroeder-Gardner

Hey! I’m Michelle Schroeder-Gardner and I am the founder of Making Sense of Cents. I’m passionate about all things personal finance, side hustles, making extra money, and online businesses. I have been featured in major publications such as Forbes, CNBC, Time, and Business Insider. Learn more here.

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  1. Addison @ Cashville Skyline

    Ugh, sorry you had such a rough hotel experience. This happens to me anytime I fly with US Airways. They are typically the cheapest out of Nashville, but I rarely get to where I need to go on time and their customer service is unbearable!

    1. Michelle S.

      That stinks! I’m very loyal to American Airlines. Some don’t like them, but my dad used to work for them so it’s all I’ve really ever used.

  2. Christine Berry – Wealth Way Online

    Wow, horrible! I had a funny being cheap backfire the other night.

    We were waiting for a taxi in downtown Singapore, by the famous Marina Bay Sands… Of course, in Singapore most people don’t owe cars and it was after midnight so there was a long queue for taxis. Like the longest line I’ve seen in my whole life.

    We had the option of taking a non-official taxi immediately or waiting for an official taxi. Price for unofficial taxi $40, unknown price of the official tax, but I guessed around $20. My boyfriend wanted to leave immediately but I thought the line wasn’t “too bad” and there were plenty of taxis so we waited.

    And we waited.

    And we waited.

    For 45 mins before we got in the taxi…. and it ended up being $10 to get home, which wasn’t bad. But was it worth saving $30 to stand in line for 45 minutes? I think not!

    1. Michelle S.

      Ugh yeah that stinks! We once had to wait in a super long line in Vegas. It wrapped around the hotel TWICE!

  3. Michelle S.

    Yes! The pictures didn’t look as bad so I thought we were fine.

  4. Michelle S.

    Yeah, I plan on disputing it. It was just horrible and they lied about many things.

  5. Pauline

    Holiday periods are a good time to use reward points. Bad places rise up their rates to make up for staying empty the rest of the year.

    1. Michelle S.

      Yeah, we don’t really have any rewards points right now. We’ve been traveling more than we’ve been home lately!

  6. vinu nair

    We had a similar experience in our visit to Niagara Falls and I have wrote about this on my blog as well. You are a better person than I for not mentioning the bad hotels name in your post. I always research my hotels nowadays prior to booking. It is true that sometimes even though the hotel is cheap they can be pretty decent, you just need to spend some time online reading reviews. I find google reviews to be more accurate.

    1. Michelle S.

      Yeah, I don’t feel comfortable sharing the name publicly but I’m always fine with sharing it over email.

  7. Kara

    Scary! Especially the door and window not locking – yikes!

    1. Michelle S.

      Yeah there were just no many negatives to the place!

  8. Michelle S.

    It was just a small highway “lodge.” I didn’t take pictures. I completely forgot with how gross it was.

  9. Brad @ How To Save Money

    In an attempt to save money I’ve been in a few bad hotels over the years. It is really important to read the reviews these days, particularly when you are traveling over seas in third world countries. You can avoid so many messes by spending a few extra dollars.

    1. Michelle S.

      Yeah, it was a huge mistake. I’m hoping I will be able to dispute it with my credit card and get the money back.

  10. Alicia

    I nearly vomited reading your description of this place. Hotels actually gross me out so much! I know they’re obviously one of those places you gave to “deal with”, but they give me the willies, even the high end ones.

    1. Michelle S.

      I’m glad I’m not alone! Even nice hotels sometimes scare me. This one was just insanely bad.

  11. DC @ Young Adult Money

    I read all the reviews for a recent hotel stay, and they were pretty positive. Unfortunately there were very few options in the town we were staying in (about two hours south of the Twin Cities). Despite the fairly positive reviews, I wasn’t impressed with the room and was a bit appalled by a few things (size of the beds, obvious former smoking room, price!). I’m just glad I had credit card rewards so it didn’t come straight out of my pocket.

    1. Michelle S.

      Yeah, I wish we had more credit card rewards right now, but we don’t. I won’t complain though, we’ve been going on a lot of trips so it would be hard to have enough rewards points for the amount of traveling we are doing.

  12. Michelle

    For the love of all that is Holy!! This is horrible (and I’m glad I was eating) I do stay at inexpensive places but I always, always check the reviews. Too many negative reviews equals a huge no from me.

    1. Michelle S.

      Haha yeah it was bad!

  13. Gary @ SuperSavingTips

    Wow that’s sounds unbelievably bad. I would definitely dispute the charges. I am a compulsive review reader, and I pay special attention to the bad reviews, and how recent the reviews are. I’ve seen some ridiculously silly complaints, for example: no kids allowed (at a couples-only resort, what did they expect?) or complaints about the weather as if the hotel was responsible for that. But I pay close attention when it sounds like the reviewer has a legitimate issue. Noticing that all the other hotels in the area were more expensive is a good indicator as well, and I’ll have to remember that for the future.

    1. Michelle S.

      Thanks Gary!

  14. Mrs. Frugalwoods

    Oh that is awful! Yuck! I definitely would not stay in a room like that–no way! Glad you were able to find a better option and enjoy your trip.

    1. Michelle S.

      Yes, I am so glad we were able to find something else.

  15. Kristina

    Hotels are one of the only things that I will splurge on when it comes to price.
    I always look at reviews, and then I also google map the area to see if it looks like a good area as well.
    i’ve never had an issue myself with a hotel room, but have known way too many people who’ve had!
    Sounds like that hotel needs to be reported to the health department.

    1. Michelle S.

      Yeah, I should have Google mapped it. That is something I will always do now