Some hotels have cabinets (or safes) which can be locked with a padlock. For best security (you never know who has a key) you could bring your own padlock.
There are various factors to consider here, in my view. The questions to ask here are:
This is very location-dependent, but all things considered in my view 3 is the worst annoyance. I feel safer leaving my passport in my hotel if I don’t have another form of ID to continue my trip, and otherwise carry it with me. Your mileage may vary, though. It is a personal choice, and opinions differ.
Safes are only as secure as the users who have access.
This could be you (the guest), a presumably trusted manager, or someone with access to the room and some google-fu.
Story: I had my honeymoon in Fiji. My wife locked our stuff in the safe, and it included something we needed at the time….medicine maybe? Point is, she forgot the PIN, or it no longer worked at least, we won’t say who was wrong 😉
5 minutes of Google searching, I found there’s a default override PIN for that particular safe that most hotels don’t change, and indeed, was able to use it to unlock our safe, get the stuff out, AND set a new PIN!
(At the end of our stay I asked to speak to the owner who we’d gotten to know, and let him know what happened. He was going to change the default PINs).
In New York, you are not required to carry ID, and you don’t have to show ID to a police officer as mentioned in this article and several others.
For London, you can view our guide here:
The UK is not like Russia or Uzbekistan where police on the street can and do stop you without cause and demand ID
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
5 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024