It is a ritual familiar to anyone who has booked a stay in Manhattan recently. You find a hotel room listed online for a manageable 250 dollars a night. You click through to the final payment screen, and suddenly the total balloons. A “destination fee” has appeared, along with a “facility surcharge” and a “service administration charge.” By the time your credit card is charged, the $250 dollar room costs $400 dollars. This increase often includes hidden resort fees.
On Wednesday, Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced that this digital sleight of hand is coming to an end.
In a press conference held at the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection, the administration unveiled a sweeping ban on hidden hotel fees, including resort fees, mandating that the advertised price of a room must include all mandatory charges. The new rule, which applies to hotels, hostels, and short-term rentals across the five boroughs, aims to eliminate the “drip pricing” model that has frustrated tourists and locals alike.
“A price tag is a promise,” Mr. Mamdani said. “For too long, the hospitality industry has used fine print to pick the pockets of visitors. If you are charging a fee that a guest cannot opt out of, that is not a fee. That is the room rate. And you need to be honest about it.”
The Anatomy of a Junk Fee
The crackdown targets a revenue stream that has exploded in the post-pandemic era. Hotels in New York City, particularly in Midtown and Times Square, have increasingly relied on mandatory surcharges to keep their advertised base rates artificially low on search engines like Expedia and Booking.com.
These charges, often euphemistically titled “Urban Resort Fees” or “Destination Fees,” typically range from 30 dollars to over 95 dollars per night.
What do these fees cover? The list is often baffling. Guests are told the mandatory charge pays for high-speed Wi-Fi (which is free at most coffee shops), access to a fitness center, a daily bottle of water, or unlimited local calls—amenities that were once considered standard. In some luxury properties, “facility fees” can climb upwards of 100 dollars a night, purportedly covering services like concierge access or “premium linen service.”
Under the new regulations, which go into effect on May 1, just in time for the summer tourism rush, hotels will now be prohibited from separating these fees from the listed room rate. If a hotel wants to charge $300 dollars plus a $50 dollar destination fee, the room must be advertised simply as 350 dollars.
A Consumer Protection Push
The move aligns with the Mamdani administration’s broader focus on affordability and consumer transparency. While the Mayor cannot control the market rate of a hotel room, he can control how that rate is presented. The administration argues that hidden fees make comparison shopping impossible, forcing consumers to click through dozens of pages to find the true cost of a stay.
The Hotel Association of New York City has expressed concern regarding the implementation, arguing that this puts New York properties at a disadvantage on global booking sites compared to hotels in neighboring New Jersey or Connecticut that can still advertise lower “base” rates. However, the Mayor’s office countered that honesty is the best amenity a city can offer.
“We want people to visit New York,” said Department of Consumer and Worker Protection Commissioner Vilda Vera Mayuga. “But we want them to leave with memories of the skyline, not resentment over a fifty dollar charge for a bottle of water.”






























































