Raincliffe1
06-05-2009, 04:00 PM
How does the hotelier tackle this one?
You pay for a premises licence, your personal licence, extra on your insurance and have a well stocked bar. We often turn a blind eye to the odd beer in the hotel bedroom or bottle of wine that is not purchased on the premises, but this weekend took the biscuit. One couple had a case of 12 lagers and 8+ bottles of wine in a cool bag in the room, plus bottles of spirits as well. My husband even said to the lady as she went on Sunday morning, 'let me get the door for you, you don't want to break any bottles.'
Personally, I would not dream of bringing my own alcohol into a hotel/guesthouse which had a drinks licence but I am beginning to think I am in a minority. On our advertising we state that only drink/food purchased on the premises can be consumed on the premises - but you cannot enforce this rigidly because it would be ridiculous mentioning every small snack for example. I do not consider our hotel bar is pricey: £1.70 for spirits, £7.99 for house wine, £0.90 for soft drinks.
My husband is fundraising at the moment so we are considering asking customers to make a donation if they wish to consume their own alcohol in the hotel rooms. Not sure how this will go down though...
Katherine
You pay for a premises licence, your personal licence, extra on your insurance and have a well stocked bar. We often turn a blind eye to the odd beer in the hotel bedroom or bottle of wine that is not purchased on the premises, but this weekend took the biscuit. One couple had a case of 12 lagers and 8+ bottles of wine in a cool bag in the room, plus bottles of spirits as well. My husband even said to the lady as she went on Sunday morning, 'let me get the door for you, you don't want to break any bottles.'
Personally, I would not dream of bringing my own alcohol into a hotel/guesthouse which had a drinks licence but I am beginning to think I am in a minority. On our advertising we state that only drink/food purchased on the premises can be consumed on the premises - but you cannot enforce this rigidly because it would be ridiculous mentioning every small snack for example. I do not consider our hotel bar is pricey: £1.70 for spirits, £7.99 for house wine, £0.90 for soft drinks.
My husband is fundraising at the moment so we are considering asking customers to make a donation if they wish to consume their own alcohol in the hotel rooms. Not sure how this will go down though...
Katherine