What do hotels due with leftover soap?

Apologies if this has been asked before (I don’t recall it and did a fair search). A quick google search did not give me a satisfactory answer.

Most fancy hotels make a big deal out of giving you new wrapped bars of soap to replace the barely used bar of soap from yesterday. I’ve never really liked this practice, which seems unnecessary and wasteful. What happens to the barely used soap? It would not seem that useful for doing laundry. Only a few places seem to try to recycle it. Do cost-conscious businesses just chuck it out or make it into insecticide or what?

My guess is they just toss it, since soap is cheap in large quantities, although a quick google does bring up some mention of recycling. They may return them to their suppliers for remanufacturing, although I doubt it.
However I have noticed that many hotels are now switching from soap to small tubes/bottles of gel, so they can just refill them and save money/resources. This seems particularly prevalent in scandinavia.

However the real snooty hotels will presumably stick with their Crabtree & Evelyn minature bars/disks. This is fine by me since I just steal them for use in camping and for the ‘make homeless people less stinky’ charity collection box in the office. Waste not want not.

Throw it away. My family takes away our slightly-used bars. Many hotels in Spain only change the semi-used bars when they change bedclothes and you can ask them not to change it (the soap, not the linens).

The teenyweeny bottles aren’t refilled, they’re thrown away. One reason to use them is that they’re a better single-use measure than the bars of soap; also, you can just get the same gel to use as shower gel and hands soap, whereas nowadays many people are used to shower gel and would have problems processing the notion of “soaping up in the shower with a bar”.

My first guess would be that employees take the opened bars home for their own use. That would be better than just tossing out perfectly good soap.
Once you wash your hands a couple times your’ve used up the portion that strangers touched and it’s fresh new soap.

Toss 'em.

twicks, who worked in the hotel biz a few incarnations ago.

I’m just curious – what made you change the spelling of the second “do” to “due”? Seems odd.

My mom did this when she worked as cleaner who cleaned hotel rooms part-time. We never wanted for shampoo, soap, or TP. But the majority were thrown out, since there’s only so much soap one person needs.

I’ve found that most hotels now will give you a new bar, but will leave the barely used soap if you’re staying multiple nights.

No thread about hotels and soaps would be complete without a link to the hotel soap saga.

I used to work in the hotel industry; we would collect the used soap(s) and when we had a boxful, call the local homeless shelter. They would come and pick it up.

They should leave it for the next occupant. After all, soap is self-cleaning*
*bad attempt at a Friends reference

Are you sure about that? What if somebody was seriously infected with… well I don’t know - the plague, leprosy, crabs… something. Can soap retain any germs/viruses at all?

Donate it to charity such as homeless shelters. The price of the soap, shampoo, shower caps, etc. can then be written off taxes.

Wait a sec…the leftover soap is thrown away. The unopened soap is given to charity, depending on the hotel.

Sigh. I used to be such a good speller. Then I took a job where I get no sleep.

jeffb
Thanks for the link. First time I’ve read that. LOL! :stuck_out_tongue:

If it retains any short, curly hairs from the person who had the hotel room before me, I have qualms about using it, germs or not.

Are they running out of hand sanitizer at your hospital, Dr_Paprika? Thinking of starting a new business?

:smiley:

(I drove through your town a couple of weeks ago on my way to Earl Rowe Provincial Park, but decided you’d probably not appreciate a drop in.)

That’s my experience. They’ll put a new, unopened soap out, but leave the opened one.

I bring my own, since I’m allergic to perfumed soap, and all except once they’ve been good at leaving it. I assume they just leave unopened soap in the room for the next guest, right?