Having over 10 years experience of staying in hostels, I feel that it is a great way of meeting new people, as well as having a cheap place to sleep for the night. Some of my stays have been pleasant, others not so. Here I have some tips about making your stay in a hostel dormitory a little more comfortable.
Which room?
A lot of hostels have a choice of different numbers of beds per room and also mixed or female only dorms. Depending on the price, I will always opt for the least beds in the dormitory. This limits the amount of times in the night you will be awoken by people coming in.
Also as a female, if they do not charge more for a female dorm (sorry males, you don’t have this option), I will take it. In my experience females are less likely to snore although I have heard some bad ones in my time. However, if the hostel are going to charge a lot more for this ‘apparent’ luxury then I will not bother.
Which bed?
Most hostels have bunk beds. I would always opt for the lower bunk. I can write a whole post just on this subject but that really wouldn’t be that useful but here are just a few reasons why!
– when people turn the light on in the night, it’s not like someone is shining a torch in you eyes.
– you can make it a little more private using a towel or a sarong by hanging it from the bed frame above you.
– you have the floor to put your stuff at night whereas if they don’t provide a shelf on the top bunk, you have very limited space with the risk of your laptop or phone crashing to the ground from a great height.
Where in the room?
This is so important as this can make all the difference. First of all I look for plugs. Everyone has electrical stuff to charge and I want mine nearest my bed. I then check that I am not too near the door or the bathroom. That way you are less likely to be woken by noise or light pollution from people using the toilet or coming in late.
I also check out the space around the bed. Is there room for me to store my backpack or is someone’s backpack already there which means there will be rustling near my head in the night? Also I don’t want my head too near someone else whilst I am asleep. I find this weird.
Booking flights soon? Check out my ’10 secrets to finding cheap flights’.
How to survive a hostel stay:
The top bunk
To prevent your stuff from crashing to the floor in the night try looping a bag onto the bars. I will add that this really shouldn’t be a plastic bag or you will be hated for being that ‘bag rustler!’
Alternatively you can put your stuff in your pillow
Use your torch or your phone to guide your way onto the top bunk so you can avoid annoying others finding your way up there.
A snorer.
The only advice I can give here is to throw something at them which will act as a ‘poke’. In Brazil I have to admit I lost my rag. We had a male staying in what was advertised as an all female dorm due to a mistake by the hostel. He woke up every single person in the room and I ended up shaking the poor unaware man till he woke when I grabbed hold of the bed frame and treated it as if I was shaking a caipirinha cocktail. Don’t become me, Don’t lose your cool, use something soft to be kind – a rubber flipflop rather than a rock 🙂
The drunks.
It is not just people who have had a bit too much to drink that turn on the dorm lights but I find these are the worst offenders. Although I do not like sleeping with an eye mask on, if I feel that this is going to happen then I will wear one when I go to sleep. Alternatively I will have one under my pillow, just in case. Or if there is any way of rigging up the trusty sarong to make a curtain around your bed, this is always the best option.
Unfortunately, there is not much you can do about the noise that drunks make, chatting to each other and falling over but ear plugs can also help. I find that by booking a female only dorm and one with fewer people tends to avoid this. Why? Well in my experience it is mostly males who get so drunk that they don’t care about their room mates although there are A LOT of exceptions to that rule. Secondly, if they have the money to spend on beer then they don’t have the spare cash to spend that little bit more to afford a 6 bed dorm rather than a 12 bed.
The bag rustlers.
My biggest peeve! This happens so much. People use plastic bags to separate their items in their backpack so when you are heading out early for a flight or a bus, you wake up the whole hostel dorm with your rustling. My advice for this . . . well it’s not like you can hide all the plastic bags whilst they are out (tempting I know). Therefore once again ear plugs are the only option. However why don’t you avoid becoming a bag rustler. Use packing cubes to separate your items! It also keeps your backpack compact and tidy.
See my My 8 top tips every traveller should know where I talk more about packing cubes.
The peeing men.
In Australia, a group of us took a trip to Fraser Island. In true Irish style, one of the guys got completely bladdered and needed the toilet in the night. With 6 of us in a tent, one of us was going to get the full hit from his bladder and as I was curled up in the corner of the tent. . . this was me! What do you do in these circumstances? Shout a lot, wake that guy up fully and NEVER NEVER let them live it down!
The food thieves.
It is amazing that you can leave your expensive camera on your hostel bed all day, but dare to leave your food for even a moment and it will be gone. I have a few tips on how to keep your food.
– Put it in an not so appealing package. If it is chocolate then hid it in a package that has pork scratchings, chicken feet or ox’s tongue as a label. Or if you are lazy then put it in a plain paper bag. People are lazy and will only take things that they can see what it is. Put your stuff out of reach, again due to people’s laziness.
Or try the sob story. Put your name on it and write a note “please do not eat me as I cannot afford to replace this”. Now who would eat someone’s only meal of the day?
Dirty showers
Wear flip flops! Why would you want to tread in bare feet in a warm and wet environment where another 20 feet have been that day. If a hostel is a little dirty, time your showers so that the cleaner has just been in. If it is really bad, why don’t you ask for a free night’s stay in return for you cleaning them 🙂
More tips on staying in a hostel
A few more tips are to travel with a sleeping bag liner. It is very light and compact but it is great to use in those hostels which either have not so clean bed sheets or charge you for the renting of sheets.
I have also been told of people who travel with an extension lead. This reduces the problem of not enough plugs in a dorm for phone charging. I haven’t actually done this but I have been tempted to. If I could find a lightweight plug strip extension then that would be ideal; however I just find them so bulky.
Lastly, introduce yourself to your roommates. You are after all going to be living with them for X number of days. Ask them if they have plans that evening which you can join, if they would like to go to X place with you the next day. Learn about them and their country of origin. I promise you that you will make life long friends in a hostel.
Some hostels provide storage for your stuff usually found under lower bunks so make sure to always bring a padlock. During off-peak season, book with the most number of beds, chances are you’ll be “upgraded” to a room with lesser number of beds. They try to fill in a room with few occupants so they have less rooms to clean, I suppose. Lastly, read the reviews, you don’t want to sleep in a bed full of bugs.
I’m more of a hotel guy but have stayed in hostels a few times and they are always quite the experience. Thanks for a great list as someday I plan to backpack with my daughter and son and these would come in handy. Although I’m all for communal living, like you mentioned, the drunks and dirty showers etc are usually what keeps me away. Things are changing and more and more hostels are stricter now I think.
First of all, having had the chance to stay in a hostel, these were some useful tips you shared. I do share a lot of your pet peeves such as rustling bags, snoring and people who can’t seem to care about the others in the room. It is always a pain to deal with other people, especially strangers. But thankfully, I can hopefully survive in my next hostel stay with these tips!
Great tips! I used to prefer the bottom bunk until one time an Irish man got smashed and peed on me!
I have always chosen the cheapest bunk bed, possibly because I can sleep anywhere anytime so it hasn’t been a problem for me. But I will sure try these tips next time I am staying at a hostel 🙂
It’s always the Irish!!!!
There’s a lot of stuff here. I also prefer bottom bunks (less struggling up there trying to be quiet) and female only dorms (less chance of having to deal with the hostel pervert) but in reality unless you book a long time in advance you have to take what is available.
In reality I’m not so keen on hostels these days; I hate having to deal with other people’s annoying little habits. Some people are so sensitive to noise they complain about the slightest little thing; really they should take earplugs 🙂
Great food-hiding tips though. I will certainly try those. I often put my stuff in my own little bag; if nothing else it stops the ‘oh I thought it was mine’ argument.
Great tips! I think I do and use almost all of them! I’ve also been staying in hostels for many many years and still do! Staying in hostels is a great way to meet other travelers, but I also have to admit that the older I get, the lazier I am to stay in hostels. Especially because nowadays, hostels sometimes tend not to be that cheap anymore, and in many countries you find many guest houses that offer single rooms for the same price.
Great trips for travelers who like or are considering staying in a hostel. Your guide is quite thorough! I can’t see myself on a bunk bed at all so for that reason this would not work well for me. I love my privacy and would hate having to share a room, I’m funny like that 🙂
I’ve stayed in hostels a few times and usually always try to book a female only dorm with 4-6 beds, for the reasons you mentioned. Last time I was in a hostel was in August. I was moving to Dublin and since the rental market here is crazy I had to stay in a 30 mix-bed hostel for a few weeks. I was so glad when I found an apartment.
Another negative point for top bunks is I’ve been to some hostels where the bunk ladder is one or two rungs and you have to hoist yourself up to the top. Not fun to do when you’re tired or drunk.
30 beds! Oh no. That sounds horrendous! Yes I have met many an unhelpful ladder when on the top bunk. Then you end up standing on someone else’s bed to get up there. No great!