Skip to content
Serving Hotels, Restaurants, Hospitals & Institutions across HORECA supply categories · +91-98377-82959
Hotel guest bathroom amenities and toiletries

Guest Amenities

3-Star vs 5-Star Hotel Amenities: What Each Tier Stocks

SGS Sales Team2 July 20264 min read

Summary

A tier-by-tier breakdown of hotel room amenities — and why copying the 5-star list onto a 3-star tariff wastes money. Match the amenity to what your room earns.

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 / facility3-star4-star5-star
Soap + shampoo (basic set)YesYesYes
Conditioner, body wash, body lotionSometimesUsuallyYes
Bath foam + bathtubNoSometimesYes
BathrobeNoSometimesYes
Dental kit / shaving kit / combBasic / on requestUsuallyYes (premium)
Hair dryer in roomSometimesUsuallyYes
Rubber bath mat + floor matFloor matBothBoth
Shaving mirror with dedicated lightNoSometimesYes
MinibarSmall / noneYesYes (larger)
Wardrobe hangersFew, one typeSeveralMany types (wooden, pant-clip, saree, coat, shirt)
Room serviceFixed hoursMost hours, not always 24×724×7 (or displayed hours)
PoolsUsually 11–22–3
Massage & salonRareMay lack full-timeYes
Multiple restaurants / bar / bakeryRareSomeYes

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.

Frequently Asked

Questions buyers ask us

What amenities does a 5-star hotel room have?

A 5-star room covers every guest need: soap dispenser, body wash, shampoo, conditioner, lotion, bath foam, bathrobe, razor, dental kit, shaving kit, comb, hair dryer, shaving mirror, a full minibar, many hanger types and 24x7 room service.

What is the difference between 3-star and 5-star room amenities?

A 5-star stocks the full set plus round-the-clock service and 2-3 pools. A 3-star carries essentials — soap, shampoo, comb, simple dental kit, floor mat — with fixed-hour service and usually one pool. The 4-star sits between, dropping 24x7 and the extra pools.

Do small hotels need premium amenities?

No. Spend should track room tariff, not the rating you want. Guests paying less rarely value premium items, they get damaged fast, and big minibars and sets are hard for a small team to keep stocked. A tight, consistent set reads better.

What soap size should a 3-star hotel use?

Run a clean 15-20 g soap in a 3-star. Use 15 g in budget or single-night rooms — most of a bigger bar is binned at checkout — and 30 g only in resort or multi-night rooms where a guest uses it across two days.

Have a requirement for your property?

SGS Sales supplies hotels, restaurants, hospitals, and institutions across North India through one accountable partner. Share your requirement and we'll respond with product details, pricing, and availability.