Hidden Hotel Resort Fees & Other Bogus Junk Fees Might Finally End.
Resort fees are a scourge at hotels in Orlando and Anaheim near Walt Disney World and Disneyland. These surcharges range from $5/night to over $40, and are hidden so consumers don’t see them when comparison shopping. This post covers why they’re anti-competitive, how “junk fees” might be addressed, and more. (Updated October 13, 2023.)
There are currently over 100 hotels in Orlando and approximately 50 in Orange County, California that charge resort fees. To their credit, Walt Disney World and Disneyland do not charge resort fees. And they probably won’t anytime soon. While there were fears they’d follow the trend a few years ago, Walt Disney World eliminated parking fees for hotel guests in 2023.
The purpose of this post is to educate consumers about resort fees and other nickel & diming practices of the travel industry, and other advice on offering said pushback. Fortunately, there are ways to “fight back” against resort fees, and that’s what we’ll help you do here. The other good news is that consumers have more leverage than ever to do battle against these anti-consumer practices, and that there’s a new FTC proposed rule to combat “junk fees” in the hospitality and other industries…
October 13, 2023 Update: Let’s start with the latest development, which is that the Federal Trade Commission announced a new proposed rule this week to prohibit junk fees, which are hidden and bogus fees that can harm consumers and undercut honest businesses that show actual prices upfront. The FTC has estimated that these fees can cost consumers tens of billions of dollars per year in unexpected costs.
“These junk fees now cost Americans tens of billions of dollars per year—money that corporations are extracting from working families just because they can,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “By hiding the total price, these junk fees make it harder for consumers to shop for the best product or service and punish businesses who are honest upfront. The FTC’s proposed rule to ban junk fees will save people money and time, and make our markets more fair and competitive.”
During the initial public comments period about the proposed FTC rule, a chorus of over 10,000 comments made clear that consumers are fed up with hidden fees for everything from booking hotels and resort fees to buying concert tickets online. Many consumers said that sellers often do not advertise the total amount they will have to pay, and disclose fees only after they are well into completing the transaction. Businesses often misrepresent or do not adequately disclose the nature or purpose of certain fees, leaving consumers wondering what they are paying for or if they are getting anything at all for the fee charged.
The proposed rule will save consumers more than 50 million hours per year of wasted time spent searching for the total price in live-ticketing and accommodations alone, according to FTC estimates. This time savings is equivalent to more than $10 billion over the next decade.
The proposed rule would require businesses to include all mandatory fees upfront in pricing, making it easier for consumers to comparison shop for the lowest price. The proposed rule would also have enforcement teeth, allowing the FTC to secure refunds for harmed consumers and seek monetary penalties against companies that do not comply with its provisions.
To accomplish this, the proposed rule would ban the following junk fee practices that consistently confuse and trick consumers:
- Hidden Fees – Businesses routinely engage in bait-and-switch pricing tactics that hide mandatory fees and deceive consumers about the price. This is because fees revealed later in the booking process, but before the purchase is made, significantly increase the total that consumers pay. Accordingly, the proposed rule would prohibit businesses from advertising prices that hide or leave out mandatory fees; and
- Bogus Fees – The rule would prohibit sellers from misrepresenting fees and require them to disclose upfront the amount and purpose of the fees, whether they are refundable and under what circumstances.
These provisions are aimed at ensuring businesses will no longer be able to lure consumers with artificially low prices that they later inflate with mandatory fees or to deceive consumers about the nature and purpose of fees.
The proposed FTC rule would provide a level playing field for honest businesses by requiring total prices to be quoted at the start of the purchasing process, and to remove false or misleading information about fees from the marketplace.
This all has gained momentum over the last several years thanks to FTC statements, consumer advocacy and, most recently, a series of high-profile airline debacles this winter. The proposed policy would curtail companies charging resort fees at hotels, service fees at concerts and sporting events, seat charges on airlines, and other excess added costs.
As a result, President Biden mentioned this proposal during his State of the Union Address earlier this year. “We’re making airlines show you the full ticket price upfront and refund your money if your flight is canceled or delayed,” Biden continued. “Baggage fees are bad enough…they can’t just treat your child like a piece of luggage. Americans are tired of being played for suckers. Pass the Junk Fees Prevention Act so companies stop ripping us off.”
“We’ll ban surprise ‘resort fees’ that hotels tack on to your bill. These fees can cost you up to $90 a night…at hotels that aren’t even resorts,” Biden said to bipartisan chuckles and applause–a rare moment of that during the address.
The bipartisan support to this is probably key to the FTC rule’s potential success. While the State of the Union has its share of theatrics and partisanship, members of Congress on both sides of the aisle approved of this message. And for good reason–these fees are wildly unpopular with Americans and the aforementioned airline incidents as well as woes with TicketMaster have shined a spotlight on this anticompetitive behavior.
This practice is anti-consumer because certain sellers publish a low price and then add mandatory fees later, at the back-end of the buying process. As the research shows, by concealing the full price, this practice can lead consumers to pay more than they would otherwise, and it also makes it hard for consumers to comparison shop.
As we discuss below, booking hotels on travel aggregator sites are a perfect example of this. With the proposed FTC rule seemingly having support on both sides of the aisle and with a broad swath of the American public, perhaps 2023 will finally be the year that resort fees become a thing of the past!
For our part, we’ve been “fighting back” against resort fees for about a decade. We occasionally have the chance to meet with hotel managers and operators to discuss their properties. If they charge a resort fee, I always ask why. The explanations typically range from ‘to show consumers we offer more amenities’ or ‘so our pricing is fair as compared to other hotels that don’t have these services.’ I’m not satisfied with these B.S. answers, so I push further. The underlying rationale seems to be because everyone else is doing it.
That attitude is why I believe this post–a departure from the typical tone and substance of our content here–is appropriate and significant. Tourists heading to Walt Disney World and Disneyland are being fleeced by third party hoteliers, including several that are on-site in the Disney Springs, Bonnet Creek, and Crescent Lake Resort Areas. More importantly, there’s something we can do about it.
Those in the hotel industry like to explain away resort fees by comparing them to baggage and other fees charged by the airline industry. While most consumers also don’t like the nickel and diming that has become standard M.O. among the airlines, that’s immaterial, because resort fees are different.
We’re far from fans of baggage fees that the airlines charge, but they are nonetheless not the same as resort fees. The critical distinction is that to avoid baggage fees, you can travel light. Along these lines, parking fees also aren’t quite the same, as you can also avoid that fee by not driving. (Both easier said than done, but that’s slightly beside the point.) There is literally no way to avoid resort fees. Everyone must pay them.
There’s no way to opt-out if you sign a pledge to not use the pool, read a newspaper, or make a cup of coffee. Since the fee is non-optional, literally every guest is paying it, just as every guest is paying the base rate. So there’s no logical argument that can be made to separate the two.
Resort fees aren’t being charged because hotels have elected to go above and beyond in offering a particularly robust slate of resort amenities like a complimentary Porsche to use while at the hotel or an in-room Smurf providing personalized concierge recommendations. (One of those is an actual amenity at a real hotel…sadly, it’s not the latter.) To the contrary, resort fees often have little to do with the amenities offered, and such fees are charged just as often at motels as they are actual resorts. (This motel even charges one. Yeah.)
The real reason hotels charge resort fees is because they make it more difficult for potential guests to ascertain the actual nightly rate. This is particularly true in the era of online booking engines like Expedia and its ilk. Booking engines typically do not show resort fees on the search results page, and only thereafter display them as an asterisk item that there is a fee that isn’t collected by the booking site.
Many travelers never see this fine print, and only learn of the added fee when they arrive at the hotel, by which time it’s typically too late to do anything about it besides grumble a bit, and pay it. Other travelers who see the fees before arrival do so after they’ve already clicked through to start the booking process, making them statistically more like to “convert.” This increased conversion rate metric in turn helps the hotel justify charging a resort fee. In short, hiding the fees is an effective way for hotels to increase bookings.
Per the FTC, fewer than 6% of all hotels in the United States charge resort fees (the percentage is exponentially higher in Florida), fees and surcharges are an incredibly lucrative revenue stream for hotels. According to Consumer Reports, the hotel industry collects roughly $3 billion in resort fee revenue per year. This is a pretty substantial number, and even shocking when considering that the amount has nearly tripled from $1.2 billion in 2004.
Resort fees are effective because they enable hotels to keep their advertised prices low to lure travel planners into the booking process with these cheaper base rates. Only later in the process do guests learn that what they will ultimately pay per night is significantly higher than the advertised rate thanks to the hidden fees.
This practice isn’t just irritating for bargain-hunting tourists. The FTC has called it a “deceptive and unfair trade practice,” and is finally starting to get serious about regulating resort fees. This doesn’t actually mean anything will happen. The FTC is a fairly toothless agency that is big on talk and light on action. The FTC sent a Warning Letter to 22 hoteliers, rebuffing them for the way their resort fees displayed. Nothing changed.
More recently, the District of Columbia attorney general filed a lawsuit against Marriott, accusing the hotel giant of deceptive fee practices. The suit accuses Marriott of employing “an unlawful trade practice called ‘drip pricing’ in advertising its hotel rooms, whereby Marriott initially hides a portion of a hotel room’s daily rate from consumers.” This is commonly labeled as a resort fee. Per the suit, Marriott has “reaped hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade from this deceptive drip pricing.”
This lawsuit has garnered serious public attention, and was borne out of an ongoing investigation conducted by the attorneys general of all 50 states and the District of Columbia into the industry-wide practice of charging mandatory resort fees. While the lawsuit does not seek to outlaw resort fees, it challenges how they’re displayed. Moreover, the public outcry following this suit means a legislative solution is likely–and that’s where the practice of charging non-optional resort fees could be deemed illegal and, ultimately, killed.
We live in an age of slactivism, where hashtag warriors fight the big issues of our day with angry tweets and modified profile pictures. However, this is one situation where the internet can actually empower people to impact change.
Every time I encounter a resort fee in a hotel I review, I belabor the point that these are consumer-unfriendly and hotel chains have been warned about them in the past by the FTC. This is to the point where it’s probably become tiresome for regular readers, but it’s my way of “fighting back” in a small way. Now, I’d encourage you to fight back in a way that actually could lead to positive change. Here’s how…
In terms of marketing, nothing matters more to hotels than their TripAdvisor ranking. Being in the top 10 or on the first page on TripAdvisor for a specific city is huge, and each higher numerical rung is statistically significant in terms of consumer interest, occupancy rate, and competitive equilibrium pricing. There are even TripAdvisor “Reputation Management” Specialists (and software) who consult hotel brands on how to shape their reputation on TripAdvisor.
The simple way to fight back is to review hotels on TripAdvisor, deduct a star (or however much you feel appropriate) for a hotel at which you stayed charging a resort fee, and indicate as much in your review. I would caution against leaving a 1-star review to “balance the scales,” but I don’t think it’s unfair to rate a hotel that was otherwise 4-stars in your mind as 3-stars on TripAdvisor due to the resort fee. For me, it’s certainly star-worthy.
This will not only impact the overall score of the hotel, giving its managers pause about the negative side of their bonus revenue stream, but will bring resort fees to the attention of other potential guests. Someone reading TripAdvisor who may not have been aware of a resort fee will have reason to delve a little deeper, instead of being surprised by a significant additional charge upon check-in.
All it takes is 3 negative reviews for the average TripAdvisor user to rule out using a particular hotel, so it is possible for anyone to fight back against resort fees. Your voices can matter–use them to send the message to hoteliers.
There’s even more you can do. We regularly receive surveys from hoteliers with whom we book and do not book reservations, often in an attempt to lure back customers. When responding, we always bring up resort fees and other practices we view as nickel & diming.
We would strongly encourage you to do the same, using this as an opportunity to voice your displeasure about how the travel industry has attempted to fleece guests in the name of wringing out additional profits. In large part, this has worked for the last decade, as business has been booming and demand was at all-time highs. With an economic downturn or potential recession on the horizon, it’s going to be a very different environment–one where consumers have much more strength. Hotels, airlines, and theme parks will need to do more to compete for the business of guests. We’d strongly encourage you to use your voice to shape their policies going forward. Enough is enough.
If you’re planning on visiting Disneyland or Walt Disney World, we have a comprehensive Disneyland Vacation Planning Guide as well as a thorough Walt Disney World Planning Guide. For Disney updates, discount information, a free download of our Money-Saving Tips for Walt Disney World eBook, and much more, sign up for our free monthly newsletter!
Your Thoughts
What do you think of resort fees? Optimistic that 2023 will be the year that the FTC enacts a rule to finally end this anti-competitive practice? Do these tacked-on charges bother you as a consumer, or is this much ado about nothing? Have you stayed in a hotel that charges a resort fee? What did you think of it? Any other thoughts or questions? We love hearing from readers, so please share any other thoughts or questions you have in the comments below!
Book private residences thru Home Away or Air BnB. The hotel rooms can sit empty with their resort fees.
Maybe trying to get travel sites to include all non-optional fees in the price search would help?
Love this idea! Resort fees are ludicrous since they are not optional, but instead part of the actual room cost. I am okay with parking fees simply because they are only charged if you plan to use and park a car.
Unrelated, bu will you be doing more SWL construction updates?
I’m in.
When I lived in Florida, I wrote my state representative and suggested that she look into legislation that would require price transparency in hotel pricing. I never got a response, and I’m not surprised; the dollar figures that Tom mentions speak louder than a random constituent.
I believe that resort fees are not taxed by the hotel tax that many areas impose on the room rate. If so, a hotel, instead of raising its room rate, which will be taxed, could instead impose a resort fee, which is not taxed. This reduces the overall cost to the public. OK, that is the theory. Are resort fees hit by the hotel tax?
Sorry Sarah, loved the opening sentence, but I also have a terrible potty mouth.
I can’t stand resort fees, never even heard of them till I stayed at the Tennessee/Nashville Gaylord. I said to the check out chick, are you kidding me, what is this cost for? And it was explained to me that it was for all of their amenities. I said “oh you mean the shops I spent money in, the tour boat I paid to ride, and the restaurants that I paid for my meals in? Oh, those amenities!
I review on trip advisor constantly, and keep getting those emails that say how wonderful I am for the volume of readers I have. So far 66,000,, not in my opinion a high volume of “helpful votes” percentage wise,, but a lot of people have read what I have to say,,, and now with this advice from Tom, you can betcha I will make sure the word resort fee will be capitalized (cool or not)- don’t care.
Add another fighter in the battle against resort fees. I can only speak to Vegas resorts, but it’s getting really bad.
It’s one thing when the fee includes free or discounted experiences you would otherwise pay for (The Stratosphere Tower, for example).
It’s completely different when it’s completely overpriced, for basically no reason (i.e. virtually every MGM property). Also, it’s freakin’ 2016. Nearly every fast food establishment has free Wi-Fi. You’d think a multi-billion dollar resort would too…
Worse yet are hotels that charge exorbitant parking fees while advertising “no resort fees!” (looking at you, Aulani!), or even on top of the high resort fee. I checked HotelTonight for Boston recently, and parking ran as high as $50/night. Crazy.
Thanks for helping spread the word, Tom! (Kudos to your editor for allowing you to push the envelope.)
First, I would never us a public WiFi, hotel or otherwise…that’s why I have a smartphone that I can tether. Hotel wifi’s are a major security risk.
Second, parking fees…why should I have to pay parking fees if I don’t arrive in a car? That part I think it ridiculous. Sigh.
At least with high-fee airlines you can choose which fees to pay, to some extent. I hate hotels fees and it makes it such a pain to compile an actual cost comparison for hotels. I have no legitimate reviews to make for these hotels because I choose not to stay in them, but keep fighting the good fight.
I totally agree with this article in principle, but in practice I am one of those that benefit from resort fees. (The same for airline fees, etc).
By having Platinum status with the SPG chain, I get resort fees waived (since the platinum benefits typically comprise exactly the same thing resort fees are supposedly for). Worth mentioning this includes the Swan/Dolphin.
So in principle, I totally agree, but in practice those paying the resort fees are effectively subsidising my stays since the rates would have to be higher without the fees (which I assume we all agree on!).
Sneaking in charges at check-out is the equivalent of arm wrestling the client out of more money when he is no longer in any position to refuse further upcharges. Such a demand is grossly untransparent and anticonsumer and should warrant a fine. Excellent article, Tom, spread the word about unfair trade practices!
I will not stay at a hotel that charges a resort fee and I am on the verge of boycotting those that charge parking fees as well. When visiting Orlando, it has been my experience that, by the time all the extra fees are added on, it is cheaper and more convenient to stay on-property at WDW.
Agreed, I always try to avoid any hotels with these fees, including parking. Next week we’re here for a quick 2 night stay, I was thinking of trying the Disney Springs resorts, but they all have fees so I got annoyed, we’re staying at Pop instead.
While I agree with you on all of this I think the reservation and booking services are also part of the problem. They should require that the hotels, motels and resorts show their ‘resort fees’ and ‘parking fees’ up front since they are fixed, not optional and always bump the price way higher than expected.
Good point. It reminds of me the early internet days of shopping for computer parts. There were price aggregators and it really paid to be at the top of the list. Shipping prices weren’t included on the aggregator, so frequently vendors would have a low price on the item, but ludicrous shipping charges. Nowadays, sites like Google Shoppong and others include the shipping cost.
Yes, that has been been frustrating when I’m on Orbitz or any of those sites, I have to search on there, then for each hotel I’m considering I have to search the internet to find resort fees, parking fees. And sometimes I can’t find out on the hotels own website but then I’ll find reviews that mention fees.
Right Lauren, I think that if the fees were valid they wouldn’t try so hard at being underhanded about collecting them.
I tried calling one of the hotels a while back to ask about fees but no one would talk about them and they kept referring me to their we site which told me to contact the hotel for information on additional fees…
We just book the Anaheim Desert Inn & Suites – They now have a resort fee, but still our best options including that (As an industrial engineer – I included all fees, including wireless, resort fees taxes and parking in my comparison). The next cheapest was the Best Western at about $1800. I give them credit, the fees were in bright red on the booking page and in my email and included in the total. Here is the email they sent – I noted the two sections that were in red and bold.
Total (before tax): 772.00
Fees
Parking Fee – 9.00 (per night)
2% T.I.D.A – 0.02 (per night)
Resort Fee – 6.00 (per night)
$6.00 Daily Resort Fee and $9.00 Daily Parking Fee. (RED/BOLD)
Room Tax: 17.00% 151.64
Sales Tax: 0.00% 0.00
Total: 1,043.80***2% Tourism Improvement District Assessment and Daily Parking Fee (From *** on were also in RED/BOLD)
OK, I haven’t even read this yet, but I have to say: This is probably the first Disney-related blog post in history to start with “Like a case of The Clap.”
What happens in Vegas, stays* in Vegas.
*Some exceptions may apply. 😉
What happens in Vegas may require antibiotics.
Lol 😀
This is an adult site… don’t worry, we can handle it. I cracked up & it perfectly depicts how I felt after learning of these substantial hidden fees.
Airport fees, Resort fees, Parking fees, and shirley there are more (yes, I called you shirley 😉 ). Too many variable hidden fees are a plague to the consumer.
I haven’t read the whole thing, but the first line first line of this post…..pure gold Tom
That line came very close to being cut at the behest of my (ahem) “editor.” Sarah said she wouldn’t have kept reading after that if I hadn’t written the post, and that it was a bit much for a Disney blog. I just couldn’t pass it up, though.
I am curious as to why Sarah objected so strongly…it not like it was gratuitous. In fact, when you consider the subject, I’m not sure I can think of a more appropriate analogy. Did she have any suggestions? Again, just curious…
A bit much, or just enough, Sarah?
Miss Sarah was right. I stopped reading after the first line, and I only skipped to the comments to see how she let this happen. Keep it classy, listen to your wife.
The other cost/fee that most people don’t notice is the TAT or Transient Occupancy Tax which goes to city the hotel is located in. Each city sets their own TAT so that should also be included in any cost comparison. Right now Anaheim, CA charges 15% while hotels located in Orange, CA only charge 10%. If you think the “Resort Fee” isn’t subject to the TAT your are wrong. So that $40 per night resort fee that you didn’t notice when you booked the room actually ends up costing you $46 after you add in the 15% TAT. Don’t get me started on the parking fees.
Yep. In Anaheim, I guess that’s the tradeoff for no ticket tax.
Parking fees are ridiculous anywhere in Orlando or Anaheim. I totally understand them in Los Angeles, New York City, or actual…ya know…cities where space is at a huge premium, but that is not the case in either place.
It will be interesting to see if the new fees for parking in Las Vegas hold or people protest and go to other hotels without the fee! Easier to get the new policy reversed when it has not been in place for years.
Tax dollars fund the FTC.
The FTC should do its job.
That is all.
“The National Park Service is probably the only branch of government worth a damn.”
~Ron Swanson
Love that quote (oh, and the article as well!).
PREACH, Brother Tom!!
I’m in on the movement against these hated fees. Just bump up the *_)@#$* base rate and I have no problem.
Exactly. At some point, I think hotels are going to see enough backlash against them that they will stop. I’m sure a lot of people would agree that a $100/night up-front rate is preferable to $70/night plus $30/night resort fee. It’s a matter of principle.