Beach fees, resort fees, cleaning fees: Additional charges are getting a little 'extra'. Photo / Getty Images
Many travellers, particular those going via the States, will be familiar with the 'resort fee'.
The peculiar mandatory $xx-per-day cost that appears at the end of your bill (and seldom anywhere else) can be a shock to the uninitiated guest's budget.
The umbrella charge is there to cover phone bills, underutilised access to a gym and the room's daily restocks of teabags.
You know, the kind of petty incremental costs you'd have thought would have been accounted for in the price of the room.
However, 'resort fees' are only one of many pieces of creative accounting that travellers should look out for.
There are now cleaning fees, beach fees, car parking costs, and all sorts of other surprise additions that arrive on check out.
Some hotels have begun introducing 'safe fees'.
This additional fee is charged under the pretence that guests should cough up a few dollars extra for guests to store their valuables inside combination safes in their room.
But there's something about introducing a 'safe fee' that smacks of racketeering.
"It would be a shame for anything to go . . . missing," reads the implied meaning, in Al Capone drawl.
Needless to say travellers are entitled to ask to have these fees removed, from their bill. Particularly if they did not even use the safes.
The Los Angeles-based writer Courtney Blacher says it is "by far, the most ridiculous fee" she has ever encountered.
"So I have to pay you additional to keep my items safe in a room I already paid for? Absolutely not!" she told USA Today.
Travellers are becoming more and more used to stumping up for additional fees that it has almost come to be expected.
Laura Mandala of travel firm Mandala Research claims that we are now "socialised" to accept paying additional fees and above the odds when they are abroad.
Talking to USA Today she said "Most customers realise by now, added convenience comes with a cost."
But what makes a fee a convenience fee? Convenient for whom?
Other businesses in other areas of travel are entirely supported by additional fees.
Last year it was revealed that budget airline Ryanair made €1.5 billion ($2.5 billion) on ancillary fees – that is income from seat allocation, snacks and sales additional to the cost of a fare.
But you get the impression that hotels are relying on guests to simply not notice an additional charge at the end of an already inflated bill.
If a hotel needs to charge guests extra to balance the books, perhaps these businesses should just raise their prices.
Yet price is a hugely important consideration in driving bookings.
Particularly in the online market, price point is an important factor for business and leisure travellers visiting a city for the first time.
Hotels are desperate to shave off any costs they can to appear cheaper in search results.
This is the reason why many booking websites often show hugely reduced fees on their listings, by counting cleaning and other service fees as additional.