UK hotel safety crisis: 1,323 sexual offences recorded in 2025, shocking figures reveal
UK hotel safety: 1,323 sexual offences in 2025

A total of 1,323 sexual offences were recorded in hotels in England in 2025, up 6.5% from 1,242 in 2024, according to FOI responses from 27 police forces obtained by Metro. Twelve forces could not provide usable data, meaning the true figure is likely higher. The findings expose serious questions about how UK hotels protect female guests.

Travelodge attack highlights security failures

Earlier this year, Kyran Smith was jailed after sexually attacking a woman in a Travelodge in Maidenhead in December 2022. Smith, who had been at the same party as the victim, was handed a key after telling reception staff he was the woman's boyfriend. The only information he was asked to provide was the guest's name. The victim, who had never stayed in a hotel by herself before, was later offered a £30 refund.

Following the incident, Travelodge introduced a policy requiring staff to obtain permission from the registered guest before issuing any additional or replacement room keys. Travelodge told Metro it also provides 24/7 reception, conducts overnight security patrols, avoids allocating ground-floor rooms to solo women where possible, prints hotel contact numbers on key wallets and doesn't announce room numbers aloud.

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No way to contact reception

In October 2023, Claire Bartlett was staying at a Premier Inn in Camden, London for a work event. 'I had actually booked myself into one of the Premier Plus suites so I wasn't on the main floor with everyone else,' the 42-year-old from the West Midlands tells Metro. 'I went back after the event, fell asleep, and then at two or three in the morning, woke up to an absolute hammering on my door.'

Through the peep hole she saw a man she didn't recognise. Dressed in black tie, it appeared to be someone who'd also attended the event. She crept back to bed and quickly realised there was no way to contact reception – no phone in the room or a number to call. 'Common sense might have said “oh Google the hotel and find reception's number”, but in that moment I totally blanked,' she shares.

The ordeal was especially traumatic because Claire had been sexually abused as a child. She says: 'I was terrified. I didn't want the man hammering on my door to know that there was someone in the room – or that I was a woman, all alone. I reverted right back to the terrified little girl I once was hiding under the blanket.'

Hours later, the man fell asleep outside her room. Staff subsequently collected him. When Claire told staff what happened the following morning, they offered her a discount on a future stay, which she felt 'downplayed' the situation. Later, she contacted Head Office, who offered a refund.

A Premier Inn spokesperson told Metro they could not comment on Claire's story, but insisted they 'never stop working to strengthen safety and security procedures'. 'Our reception teams are available 24/7 in the event our guests need them and can also be contacted by mobile phone if necessary, with the hotel number available online as well as shared with our guests through booking confirmations,' they added. When Metro asked about telephone policy, Guest Relations said: 'Telephones are not provided at most hotels – local rate numbers for reception teams can be found in every room.'

Key given to wrong guest

Abigail Cousins, 34, a business development manager for a travel company, has stayed in hundreds of UK hotels. In 2019, while staying at a popular UK budget hotel chain in Solihull, a key to her room was given to another guest, resulting in a man entering her room while she was in the shower – an occurrence industry insiders know 'happens a lot'.

'When I heard someone was in my room I screamed,' she shares. 'He was so apologetic, explaining that he must have got his room numbers confused. He quickly turned around and walked out, but what stuck with me was the fact that he didn't even have to say the name of the guest on the hotel booking – staff just gave him a key.'

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During another stay in a hotel in Manchester, Abigail was shocked to find her room's security chain had been removed. Staff told her this was the same in every room, claiming it was due to fire safety. Due to potential work conflicts, Abigail has chosen not to name the hotels. But she claims one 'very well-known brand' made her sign a waiver before giving her a ground-floor room. 'The waiver basically said that I was happy to stay on the ground floor, that I understood the risks, and that there was no liability to the hotel if anything was to happen,' she says.

Rise in reported incidents and safety advice

Stephanie Boyle from the Safer Tourism Foundation recently helped launch a campaign titled 'She Travels Safe', geared at providing practical tools and safety tips for women. She tells Metro that the foundation's analysis of safety reports from UK-based travel operators, covering more than 10 million annual trips, found a 60% rise in reported sexual harassment and assault incidents in 2024 compared to 2023.

Alongside advice such as choosing accommodation carefully and checking for potential security vulnerabilities, the campaign urges every woman travelling solo to pack one simple item. 'Pack a door wedge,' Stephanie says. 'This may feel extreme, but not all hotel doors have chain locks or deadbolts. That way, even if someone outside has a key, they won't be able to get in. It's simple, inexpensive (you can find one online for less than £1) and easy to pack.'

Industry inconsistency

Carolyn Pearson, CEO of travel security company Maiden Voyage, tells Metro there is still no 'consistent approach across the industry'. Just recently, she was staying in a London hotel when her room number was said aloud at reception. When she told the staff member this could put guests at risk, he allegedly replied that management had never informed him of this – nor had he received any training on the matter.

The Safer Tourism Foundation is currently working with the hospitality industry to try and prevent serious harm from coming to any traveller. Some hotels have already signed up to the Safer Tourism Pledge – a set of commitments made by travel providers, articulating a stringent approach to traveller risk, health and safety. But as Abigail says: 'A lot of the hotels in the UK are not geared up for women travelling solo. In fact, there are a number of places abroad where I actually feel safer.'