Guest amenities are one of the most tangible ways a hotel communicates its standard of care. They are the first things a guest touches after checking in, and they shape the immediate impression of your property. Yet many hotels treat amenities as an afterthought, defaulting to the same generic products year after year without considering what today's guests actually expect.
This checklist covers every category of guest amenity a UK hotel should be evaluating in 2026 — from bathroom essentials through to premium differentiators that earn five-star reviews.
Essential bathroom amenities
These are non-negotiable. Every guest room should include the following as standard, regardless of your property's star rating:
- Shampoo — a quality formulation that guests will actually use rather than ignore in favour of their own
- Conditioner — frequently omitted at budget properties, but expected by the vast majority of guests
- Body wash or shower gel — increasingly preferred over bar soap for hygiene reasons
- Bar soap — still valued at the washbasin, especially in a quality presentation
- Body lotion — a small touch that signals attention to guest comfort
Convenience items guests expect
These items are inexpensive to provide but frequently mentioned in reviews when they are missing. A well-stocked vanity tray should include:
- Dental kit — toothbrush and toothpaste for guests who forget theirs
- Shaving kit — disposable razor and shaving cream
- Sewing kit — compact needle-and-thread set for emergencies
- Shower cap — one of the most requested items at front desk when absent from rooms
- Cotton buds and cotton pads — essential for guests' personal grooming routines
Room amenities beyond the bathroom
Amenities that extend into the bedroom and living area elevate the overall guest experience and justify higher room rates:
- Slippers — disposable or reusable, depending on your positioning and sustainability goals
- Bathrobes — expected at four-star properties and above; a welcome surprise at three-star
- Shoe shine kit — a classic hospitality touch that business travellers particularly appreciate
Premium touches that differentiate
The amenities above meet expectations. The following exceed them — and they are where your property can stand apart from the competition:
- Branded amenities — products carrying your hotel's own branding create a cohesive, professional identity that guests remember
- Local and artisan products — partnering with regional producers (a British-made soap, a locally blended tea) gives guests a sense of place
- Welcome gifts — a handwritten note with a small edible treat or a miniature of a local spirit turns check-in into an experience
What the research shows: A 2025 UK hospitality survey found that 78% of guests consider bathroom amenity quality when rating their stay, and 64% said branded or locally sourced products made them more likely to rebook. Amenities are not a cost centre — they are a direct driver of repeat business and positive reviews.
Sustainability considerations
Guest expectations around sustainability have shifted from preference to requirement. In 2026, hotels that still rely entirely on single-use plastic miniatures risk both negative guest feedback and non-compliance with emerging UK packaging regulations. The key decisions are:
Refillable dispensers vs single-use bottles. Wall-mounted dispensers reduce plastic waste by up to 80% and lower your per-room amenity cost over time. They work well for shampoo, conditioner, and body wash. However, individual items like soap and lotion still benefit from single-serve presentation — opt for plastic-free or compostable packaging where possible.
Plastic-free packaging. Paper-wrapped soaps, cardboard tubes for dental kits, and plant-based cling for amenity trays are now widely available at comparable price points. Guests notice, and they mention it in reviews.
Own-brand vs white-label amenities
Hotels face a choice between commissioning their own branded product line and purchasing white-label products from a supplier. Own-brand amenities carry your logo and reinforce your identity, but they require minimum order quantities and upfront design investment. White-label products are ready to order immediately, often at lower minimums, and are ideal for properties that want quality without the branding commitment.
A practical middle ground: use own-brand packaging for your hero products — shampoo, conditioner, body wash — and white-label for supplementary items like sewing kits and shower caps. This approach maximises brand visibility where it matters most while keeping costs controlled across the full amenity range.
At Connekd, we supply both own-brand and white-label guest amenities across every category on this checklist. Whether you are refreshing a single property or standardising amenities across a hotel group, we can build a package that fits your positioning and your budget.