A 5-star room stocks for every possible guest need — soap dispenser, body wash, shampoo, conditioner, lotion, bath foam, bathrobe, razor, dental kit, shaving kit, comb, full minibar, many hanger types. A 4-star runs most of the same list but drops the round-the-clock services and sits at 1–2 pools. A 3-star carries the essentials and usually one pool. The mistake that costs money is copying the 5-star list onto a 3-star tariff. Match the amenity to what your room actually earns.
What each tier actually stocks
| Amenity / facility | 3-star | 4-star | 5-star |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soap + shampoo (basic set) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Conditioner, body wash, body lotion | Sometimes | Usually | Yes |
| Bath foam + bathtub | No | Sometimes | Yes |
| Bathrobe | No | Sometimes | Yes |
| Dental kit / shaving kit / comb | Basic / on request | Usually | Yes (premium) |
| Hair dryer in room | Sometimes | Usually | Yes |
| Rubber bath mat + floor mat | Floor mat | Both | Both |
| Shaving mirror with dedicated light | No | Sometimes | Yes |
| Minibar | Small / none | Yes | Yes (larger) |
| Wardrobe hangers | Few, one type | Several | Many types (wooden, pant-clip, saree, coat, shirt) |
| Room service | Fixed hours | Most hours, not always 24×7 | 24×7 (or displayed hours) |
| Pools | Usually 1 | 1–2 | 2–3 |
| Massage & salon | Rare | May lack full-time | Yes |
| Multiple restaurants / bar / bakery | Rare | Some | Yes |
The 5-star column is the full "cover every guest need" list from a proper five-star brief; 4-star competes closely but pulls back on 24×7 services and the second-through-third pool; 3-star is the essentials.
Amenity to your tariff, not your aspiration
This is the honest part, and it's where I stop most first-time resort owners before they overspend.
A 5-star justifiably spends more — on staff, linen, toiletries, minibar, hangers, bathroom fittings — because the room tariff pays for it. When a much smaller property chases that same standard on a lower tariff, three things go wrong:
- Guests paying less often don't value premium amenities. The 30 g soap and the lotion tube get used once or wasted, not appreciated.
- Premium items get damaged and depreciate fast in rooms that turn over budget guests — bathrobes, glass fittings, the fancy razor.
- Big minibars and premium amenity sets are harder for a small team to maintain — someone has to check, restock, and audit every one of them, every turn.
So the spend should track room tariff and target guest, not the rating you wish you had. A 3-star that puts a clean 15–20 g soap, a good shampoo sachet, a comb and a simple dental kit in the room — and keeps them consistently stocked — reads better than a 3-star trying to look 5-star and running out of half of it.
Mapping the range to a tier
Here's what we actually stock against each tier, so you buy to the room:
- Toiletries — glycerine soap in 15 / 20 / 30 g. Run 15 g in budget/single-night rooms (most of a bigger bar is binned at checkout), 30 g in resort/multi-night rooms where a guest uses it across two days. Shampoo/conditioner/body wash come in 15 / 20 / 30 ml mini bottles, plus 300/500 ml pump bottles and 1 L / 5 L refills for back-of-house. See bottles vs refillable dispensers for which format fits a new vs established property.
- Dental kit — folded brush + a single-use paste sachet/mini tube in a sleeve. Boxed or in a sachet; a 3 g tube covers one brushing, so it's a top-up, not a two-night replacement. Basic in 3-star, printed-sleeve premium in 5-star (custom-print MOQ 2,000 pcs, sleeve or box).
- Vanity kit — cotton buds, cotton pads, nail file, sometimes a small mirror, in a sleeve. Boxed, sachet, or loose. 4/5-star room amenity; a 3-star can skip or offer on request. Buy by segment, not as one bloated combo.
- Shaving kit + comb — kept as separate SKUs so you order by what guests actually open. Standard in 4/5-star.
- Slippers — non-woven for the volume rooms, 5 mm-sole (standard and premium) where the room warrants it. One disposable pair per guest.
- Eco line — wheat-straw/bagasse combs and kits, paper-wrapped soaps, kraft packaging. 5-star increasingly wants the eco option; you can switch item by item rather than all at once.
Print any of these under Saravi (our own brand) or your property's name.
A real example
A resort we supply in the Jim Corbett belt opened aiming to look one tier above its actual room rate — full toiletry set, heavier soap, printed sleeves on everything, a stocked minibar in every room. Within two seasons the minibars were half-empty and half-audited, the premium bars were getting thrown out barely used, and housekeeping couldn't keep every room to spec on turn day. We took them down to a tighter, consistent set that fit the tariff: a well-branded 20 g soap, a good shampoo, a dental kit and comb, slippers, minibar only in the higher-category rooms. Per-room amenity cost dropped, guest complaints didn't move, and the rooms actually stayed stocked. The lesson their GM repeats now: stock the tier you charge for.
What to do next
- See the room amenity range — soaps, dental/vanity/shaving kits, slippers, eco line — on the room amenities page.
- Tell us your room count, your average room tariff and whether you're single-night or multi-night, and we'll spec the amenity set to that tier — including where the cheaper item is the right call, not the premium one.

