What makes a hotel Shabbat-friendly?

The seven-point checklist to run before you book โ€” from people who work in hotels

"Shabbat-friendly" on a booking site can mean anything from a fully kosher hotel with a synagogue in the lobby to a front desk that once met an observant guest. Before relying on any listing โ€” including ours โ€” confirm these seven things with the hotel directly.

1. The elevator, on your specific dates

A Shabbat elevator stops automatically on every floor (or preset floors) so no buttons are pressed. Ask not whether one exists but whether it runs on the Shabbat of your stay โ€” in some hotels it operates only when observant groups are in-house. If there's no Shabbat elevator, ask for a low floor.

2. Room access without electronics

Nearly every modern hotel uses electronic key cards. Hotels used to observant guests have a standing answer: a mechanical override key, a manual-lock room block, or a staff escort arrangement. If the front desk has never heard the question, that tells you how the rest of the stay will go. Watch for motion-sensor lights and sensor toilets in the room too โ€” ask for them to be disabled or taped where possible.

3. Who certifies the kitchen โ€” and what exactly is kosher

Three different questions: which authority certifies (and is the certificate current), which meals are covered (sometimes only breakfast), and whether "kosher-style" is doing quiet work in the description โ€” kosher-style is not certification. Your own rabbinic authority decides which certifications you rely on.

4. Shabbat meals, pre-paid

Confirm Shabbat dinner and lunch can be arranged and paid before Shabbat (on your folio or in advance). Established Shabbat-friendly hotels often need meal orders by Thursday midday โ€” ask about the deadline when you book, not when you arrive.

5. Walking distance to a minyan

"Near the synagogue" on a map can be a highway crossing in reality. Ask the hotel for the actual walking route and time, and whether a minyan meets in the hotel itself on Shabbat (common in Jerusalem, Netanya, and hotels serving observant communities).

6. The eruv

If you'll need to carry anything outdoors โ€” a key, a stroller, reading glasses โ€” check whether the hotel sits inside the local eruv and whether it's checked weekly. The hotel or the local community can tell you; don't assume.

7. Check-in and check-out timing

Arrive with enough margin before candle-lighting to check in, get your room arrangement working, and pre-authorize payment. For Saturday-night or Sunday departures, confirm a late checkout or luggage arrangement so you're not handling payment on Shabbat.

We track exactly these attributes for every hotel in the directory.

38+ hotels with sourced, dated information: Shabbat elevators, room access, certification, meals, minyan distance.

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