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When I first started traveling for work and staying in decent hotels, I remember feeling like everyone could tell I didn’t belong there. Not because I couldn’t afford it, but because of a dozen little habits I’d picked up growing up that suddenly felt out of place in those polished lobbies.
Years later, after countless nights in hotels from budget chains to five-star establishments, I’ve noticed something interesting. Those of us who grew up in lower-middle-class households carry certain behaviors with us into these spaces.
They’re not necessarily bad habits, but they’re telling. They reveal a childhood where every pound mattered and waste was practically a sin.
I’ve seen these patterns in myself, in friends from similar backgrounds, and in countless fellow travelers over the years. They’re the subtle markers of a particular kind of upbringing, one where your parents worked hard to keep you comfortable but where luxury was always just out of reach.
1. They hoard the free toiletries like they’re made of gold
You know that little thrill when you see those miniature shampoo bottles lined up in the bathroom? For many of us who grew up watching our parents stretch every penny, those toiletries aren’t just amenities. They’re treasures to be collected.
I still remember my dad coming home from his rare business trips with a bag full of tiny soaps and lotions for my mum. It wasn’t about being cheap. It was about not wasting something that was already paid for.
Growing up in a factory town outside Manchester, where my dad worked long shifts just to keep us comfortable, you learned that everything had value.
Even now, with a stable income and no real need for hotel soap, I catch myself pocketing those bottles. It’s almost automatic. The voice in my head sounds a lot like my mother’s: “You’ve paid for the room, haven’t you? Those are yours to take.”
2. They eat breakfast like it’s their last meal
The complimentary breakfast buffet is where this behavior really shows itself. Watch someone from a lower-middle-class background at that breakfast spread, and you’ll likely see them loading up their plate with a determination that borders on strategic.
It’s not about greed. It’s about maximizing value. When you grew up in a household where eating out was a special occasion and second helpings weren’t always guaranteed, a free unlimited breakfast feels like winning the lottery. You eat enough to last until dinner if possible, maybe wrap a muffin in a napkin for later.
I’ve mentioned this before but growing up, holidays meant my parents calculating every meal expense down to the last penny. So when breakfast is included? You better believe we’re getting our money’s worth.
3. They check and recheck that nothing is left behind
Ever seen someone check under the bed three times, open every drawer twice, and still do a final sweep before checkout? That’s the hallmark of someone who grew up understanding that replacing forgotten items wasn’t always possible.
Leaving something behind meant either going without or watching your parents stress about unexpected expenses. That phone charger wasn’t just a charger. It represented hours of your parent’s labor. This mindset stays with you.
I still do the triple-check ritual. Open every drawer, look behind every curtain, check the bathroom counter one more time. My partner, who grew up more comfortably, finds it excessive. But when you were raised to understand the true cost of things, being careless with possessions feels wrong.
4. They avoid room service like the plague
Room service might as well have a sign that says “not for people like us.” Even when traveling for business with expenses covered, many of us who grew up lower-middle-class just can’t bring ourselves to order that overpriced sandwich to the room.
The markup feels offensive when you know what that money could buy at a regular restaurant. Twenty pounds for a club sandwich? That’s what my mum used to spend on groceries for three days. The math doesn’t just feel wrong. It feels morally wrong.
Instead, we’ll walk ten minutes to find a shop or grab something from a vending machine. It’s not about being unable to afford it anymore. It’s about a deeply ingrained sense of what things should cost and a refusal to be taken for a ride.
5. They tip anxiously and often awkwardly
Tipping at hotels reveals so much about class background. Those of us from lower-middle-class families often approach it with a unique combination of generosity and uncertainty. We want to tip well because we know what it’s like to work service jobs, but we’re never quite sure of the etiquette.
How much for the person who brings extra towels? What about housekeeping? Should you tip daily or at the end? The rules were never taught to us because our families rarely stayed in hotels that expected tips.
I remember the first time I stayed somewhere nice enough to have a bellhop. I had no idea what to tip, so I probably overtipped out of anxiety. Better to err on the side of generosity than to be seen as cheap, especially when you’re already worried about fitting in.
6. They treat hotel staff like equals, not servants
Here’s something beautiful about growing up working-class or lower-middle-class: you see the humanity in service workers because you are them, or your parents were them. We chat with housekeeping, ask the receptionist about their day, and say please and thank you like we mean it.
My dad’s involvement in his factory union taught me early that everyone deserves respect, regardless of their job. When I see someone treating hotel staff poorly, I can usually guess they didn’t grow up understanding what that kind of work really means.
We might feel out of place in fancy hotels, but we never act superior to the people working there. If anything, we’re more likely to apologize for making their job harder, even when we shouldn’t.
7. They hesitate before using hotel amenities
The pool, the gym, the business center. These amenities are included in your stay, yet many of us who grew up lower-middle-class approach them with hesitation. Are we really allowed to use these? Won’t someone stop us and ask what we’re doing here?
It’s imposter syndrome in its purest form. Even though we’ve paid for the room and have every right to use these facilities, there’s still that voice suggesting we don’t belong. That these things are for other people, not for us.
I’ve gotten better at this over the years, but I still remember the first time I used a hotel pool feeling like I was trespassing, even with my room key in hand.
8. They keep the Do Not Disturb sign up constantly
Privacy in a lower-middle-class household was often a luxury. You shared rooms, shared bathrooms, shared everything. So when we get a hotel room to ourselves, we guard that privacy fiercely.
But it’s more than just wanting space. It’s also about not wanting to be judged. What if housekeeping thinks we’re messy? What if our belongings look cheap? What if we’re doing something wrong and don’t know it? Better to keep everyone out and clean up after ourselves.
The bottom line
These behaviors aren’t flaws to be fixed. They’re reminders of where we came from and the values our families instilled in us: don’t waste, work hard, respect others, and never forget the value of money.
I’ve learned to navigate fancier spaces over the years, but I haven’t lost these habits entirely. Nor would I want to. They keep me grounded, remind me that comfort isn’t guaranteed, and help me appreciate what I have.
The next time you’re in a hotel and catch yourself pocketing those tiny shampoo bottles or loading up at the breakfast buffet, don’t feel embarrassed.
These habits are part of your story. They’re proof that you’ve come from somewhere, that you’ve journeyed upward, and that you haven’t forgotten the lessons learned along the way.

















