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Guest friendly hotels por Sergio549821

Most higher end hotels are not very guest friendly. So what I do is... let's assume I am staying for 5 nights. I make 5 separate reservations for 1 night each. That way I can bring a different girl each night. If you make one reservation for 5 nights, the first girl is 'free' considered to be your +1 guest. But if you bring other girls within your 5 night reservation, they may charge you COP$50-$100 per girl. If you bring 2 girls for a threesome, they may deny entry to second girl or charge you extra for the third girl. Policy really varies between hotels.
Airbnbs are usually better bets. A few nice buildings like Energy are guest friendly as long as they have ID. I used to reserve at Blux but now it's hit and miss. Some units are guest friendly whereas other units require 'permission' from the unit owner before allowing anyone other than registered guest to enter. So getting a hold of the owner at 1am if you are coming to the building with a girl may be a challenge.
Many Airbnb description will state whether visitors are allowed. Or I message the host before making reservation that I may have a colleague or two, or some family member, visit during during my stay. Now I usually stick to Airbnbs which do not have front desk security. Yes it may be a little risker but I just do not want the BS of registering guests. If you are new to Medellin then hotels or Airbnbs with front desk security is the way to go as when they girl is leaving they will call you to make sure everything is OK before letting the girl leave the building.
 
I think the Dann Carlton still let's you do that. Also Hotel Estelar Milla De Oro. BUT, CHECK directly with the hotel first as policies are constantly changing. Otherwise just go with @GringoFeo's advice re: AirBnB. Especially the safety aspect.
 
I thought
Most higher end hotels are not very guest friendly. So what I do is... let's assume I am staying for 5 nights. I make 5 separate reservations for 1 night each. That way I can bring a different girl each night. If you make one reservation for 5 nights, the first girl is 'free' considered to be your +1 guest. But if you bring other girls within your 5 night reservation, they may charge you COP$50-$100 per girl. If you bring 2 girls for a threesome, they may deny entry to second girl or charge you extra for the third girl. Policy really varies between hotels.
Airbnbs are usually better bets. A few nice buildings like Energy are guest friendly as long as they have ID. I used to reserve at Blux but now it's hit and miss. Some units are guest friendly whereas other units require 'permission' from the unit owner before allowing anyone other than registered guest to enter. So getting a hold of the owner at 1am if you are coming to the building with a girl may be a challenge.
Many Airbnb description will state whether visitors are allowed. Or I message the host before making reservation that I may have a colleague or two, or some family member, visit during during my stay. Now I usually stick to Airbnbs which do not have front desk security. Yes it may be a little risker but I just do not want the BS of registering guests. If you are new to Medellin then hotels or Airbnbs with front desk security is the way to go as when they girl is leaving they will call you to make sure everything is OK before letting the girl leave the building.
thank you I thought Airbnbs though would ban you if they thought you were engaging in prostitution in there
 
I thought

thank you I thought Airbnbs though would ban you if they thought you were engaging in prostitution in there
How would an Airbnb host know if the girl is a prostitute? Doubt they would dare ask you or her. I have never been asked such a thing. I get the impression that no-prostitution policy is directed more at girls to not use an Airbnb as their incall location.
 
Honestly, that “5 different reservations for 5 nights” trick is a myth.

I’ve worked in hotels here in Medellín, and this situation used to happen all the time. Trust me: front desk staff are not stupid. They know very quickly when a guest is likely to bring escorts and when he isn’t. If someone makes 5 separate reservations with the obvious intention of bringing different girls, the hotel will notice right away and the policy will still be applied.
Especially in 5-star hotels in El Poblado, those places are very strict now. It doesn’t matter if you book 5 nights in one reservation or 5 separate reservations. If the hotel has a no-sex-tourism policy, they will enforce it anyway. Making multiple bookings won’t magically bypass the rules.

Right now, Medellín (and El Poblado in particular) is under a lot more pressure regarding sex tourism, so security is tighter and flexibility is lower than it was a few years ago. Some small hotels might let things slide, but most won’t.

My recommendation is simple:
👉 Book hotels that are actually guest-friendly, not hotels where you’re trying to “outsmart” the system, so don’t waste your time coming to Medellín trying to be “smarter than the system” or trying to outsmart the front desk staff. That usually doesn’t work. Most receptionists are very strict, not because they want to be difficult, but because management pressures them hard and they simply can’t be flexible, even if the girl looks “normal” or doesn’t obviously look like an escort.
I worked night shifts as a night auditor, and trust me, this happened to me a lot. Guests would try to negotiate, push, argue, or even offer bribes. I always said no, because no job is worth that. Those situations usually end in arguments, people getting angry, and the whole night gets ruined, for the guest and for the girl too.
That’s exactly what I’m trying to help you avoid. To save yourself the headache, don’t try to play games with the receptionist. The safest move is what we’ve already told you here: ask the hotel directly through their chat or email about their guest policy before booking, and then book accordingly. Most hotels have chat now, so there’s no excuse.
Trying to “slip something” to the front desk almost never works, because at the end of the day, no receptionist is going to risk their job for that.

In conclusion, For example, I personally suggest Loma Verde Hotel. It’s a good hotel, belongs to Casacol, located above Provenza in a very residential, quiet area. When I worked there (2–3 years ago), the guest fee was around 100,000 COP (about $30). It may be higher now, maybe 150k or 200k, but that’s still cheap compared to hotels that charge $100 USD per guest.
So my advice is:
Always ask the hotel before booking
Choose hotels that are truly guest-friendly
Or, like someone else already said, if you want zero hassle, Airbnb is the safest option 🙏✍️
 
Última edición:
Honestly, that “5 different reservations for 5 nights” trick is a myth.

I’ve worked in hotels here in Medellín, and this situation used to happen all the time. Trust me: front desk staff are not stupid. They know very quickly when a guest is likely to bring escorts and when he isn’t. If someone makes 5 separate reservations with the obvious intention of bringing different girls, the hotel will notice right away and the policy will still be applied.
Especially in 5-star hotels in El Poblado, those places are very strict now. It doesn’t matter if you book 5 nights in one reservation or 5 separate reservations. If the hotel has a no-sex-tourism policy, they will enforce it anyway. Making multiple bookings won’t magically bypass the rules.

Right now, Medellín (and El Poblado in particular) is under a lot more pressure regarding sex tourism, so security is tighter and flexibility is lower than it was a few years ago. Some small hotels might let things slide, but most won’t.

My recommendation is simple:
👉 Book hotels that are actually guest-friendly, not hotels where you’re trying to “outsmart” the system, so don’t waste your time coming to Medellín trying to be “smarter than the system” or trying to outsmart the front desk staff. That usually doesn’t work. Most receptionists are very strict, not because they want to be difficult, but because management pressures them hard and they simply can’t be flexible, even if the girl looks “normal” or doesn’t obviously look like an escort.
I worked night shifts as a night auditor, and trust me, this happened to me a lot. Guests would try to negotiate, push, argue, or even offer bribes. I always said no, because no job is worth that. Those situations usually end in arguments, people getting angry, and the whole night gets ruined, for the guest and for the girl too.
That’s exactly what I’m trying to help you avoid. To save yourself the headache, don’t try to play games with the receptionist. The safest move is what we’ve already told you here: ask the hotel directly through their chat or email about their guest policy before booking, and then book accordingly. Most hotels have chat now, so there’s no excuse.
Trying to “slip something” to the front desk almost never works, because at the end of the day, no receptionist is going to risk their job for that.

In conclusion, For example, I personally suggest Loma Verde Hotel. It’s a good hotel, belongs to Casacol, located above Provenza in a very residential, quiet area. When I worked there (2–3 years ago), the guest fee was around 100,000 COP (about $30). It may be higher now, maybe 150k or 200k, but that’s still cheap compared to hotels that charge $100 USD per guest.
So my advice is:
Always ask the hotel before booking
Choose hotels that are truly guest-friendly
Or, like someone else already said, if you want zero hassle, Airbnb is the safest option 🙏✍️
Thank you for the advice
 
Me/myself, I would only book air BnB /vrbo w/o security if you already know and trust the chicas. Otherwise, I would book hotel/ condo complex with security like Energy Living ($$$- never been charged for chica) / the Charlie ($$$- allowed chica before, not sure now and I wasn’t charged for chica) - Hotel Dix ($$- don’t know about chica charge). You always want to be safe and spending the extra money is worth it. When booking your room, book for 2/3 guest. Do your research and if any ??s, ask the host/concierge, best to know if it’s ok and charge. Always inform the chica that the place you are staying has security and they will need to present ID (sometimes passport) and you will need to check them in/out). If they balk at this, you don’t want to see them. Believe me, you want this.
 
A follow up……I always book my room/condo for 2 people….3 if I have 2 beds…..when talking with host/concierge. I tell them upfront that it will just be me staying in room (as most ask for passport info when booking), but I will have friends coming to visit and will check them in at front desk. Never had a problem.
I have never stayed at Hotel Dix, but a few friends have and they have had no issues as long as chica has ID.
 
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