Hotels With No Weight Limit: Welcoming Dogs of Any Size
Screen for the weight rule first, and every other part of booking a pet-friendly hotel becomes simple.
The weight limit is the single most common reason a pet booking falls apart at check-in. A hotel may advertise that pets are welcome, then cap dogs at 50 pounds in the fine print, which rules out a huge share of the dog population. If your dog is on the larger side, the search is really a search for hotels with no weight limit. Several national brands set exactly that policy, and this guide shows which ones, why the caps exist elsewhere, and how to confirm before you pay.
Screen for the weight rule first, and every other part of booking a pet-friendly hotel becomes simple.
Why weight limits exist
Weight limits are a proxy for perceived risk. Some hotels assume a bigger dog means more wear on a room, more noise, or a harder time being carried through a lobby, so they cap size rather than judge each dog individually. The assumption does not hold up well, since a calm 80-pound dog is often easier on a room than an anxious small one, and the most pet-forward brands have dropped weight limits for that reason. For an owner, the takeaway is practical: do not argue the logic at the desk, just book a property that has already decided size does not matter.
Hotel brands with no weight limit
Kimpton Hotels. Kimpton's brand-wide policy is one of the most generous anywhere: reported no pet fee, no weight or breed limit, and no cap on the number of pets, dogs and cats alike. Where there is a Kimpton nearby, it is usually the easiest pet-friendly booking in town.
Motel 6. Motel 6 is known for letting pets stay free at most locations, which makes it a dependable budget choice for a road trip or a longer stay. Confirm the per-location pet limit when you book.
Red Roof. Red Roof welcomes one well-behaved pet free at most locations, a solid no-fee option that often works for larger dogs. Check the individual property's size limit.
Loews Hotels. Through the Loews Loves Pets program, Loews properties welcome pets with a bed, bowls, treats, and a local walking guide, usually for a modest per-stay fee and with no strict size limit. A reliable upscale option.
| Hotel brand | Reported national pet policy |
|---|---|
| Kimpton Hotels | No weight limit, no breed limit, no fee |
| Motel 6 | No weight limit; pets stay free at most locations |
| Red Roof | One pet free at most locations, large dogs common |
| Loews Hotels | Loews Loves Pets, no strict size limit |
What to confirm before you book
- No weight limit stated for the specific property, in writing where possible.
- Any breed restriction, since larger dogs can run into both rules at once.
- A ground-floor or low-floor room near an exit, which suits a big dog.
- The nearest real green space, since larger dogs need proper exercise.
How pet fees work at hotels
Pet fees are where hotels differ most, so it helps to know the common structures before you compare prices. A one-time fee is a single charge for the whole stay, often 50 to 150 dollars, and it is usually the best value for longer trips. A per-night fee is charged for each night, so a 50-dollar nightly fee across a five-night stay reaches 250 dollars. A refundable deposit is held against damage and returned after checkout if the room is left clean. And a growing number of hotels charge nothing at all.
Before you book, ask two questions: is the fee charged per pet or per room, and is it per night or per stay? Those two answers explain most of the difference between a cheap pet stay and an expensive one, and they prevent the surprise line item that too many pet owners only notice at checkout.
Tips for a smooth stay with your pet
- Confirm the policy in writing. Verify the fee, weight, breed, and number-of-pets rules before you pay, and keep the confirmation email.
- Ask for the right room. Request a ground-floor or low-floor room near an exit for easy walks, and a quieter spot away from the elevator and ice machine.
- Bring the essentials. Pack your pet's food, a bed or blanket that smells like home, waste bags, a travel bowl, and any medications.
- Plan the walks. Note the nearest park and a 24-hour vet before you arrive, so you are not searching in the moment.
- Be a considerate guest. Never leave a pet unattended unless the hotel allows it, keep your dog leashed in shared spaces, and clean up every time.
Exercise and relief areas near your hotel
Part of a smooth pet-friendly stay is knowing where your pet will go once you check in. Before you arrive, find the hotel's designated pet relief area and the nearest patch of green space, since a quick, easy route matters far more day to day than any lobby amenity. Identify the closest large park with walking paths, any off-leash dog park in the area, and a safe stretch of sidewalk for short breaks. Save the location of the nearest 24-hour veterinary clinic as well. Carry waste bags on every outing, keep your dog leashed outside designated off-leash areas, and shorten walks in extreme heat or cold, bringing water whenever it is warm. A pet that has been walked and watered settles into a hotel room far more easily than one that has been cooped up in the car.
Common pet-travel mistakes to avoid
A handful of avoidable mistakes cause most pet-travel trouble. The first is assuming a policy instead of confirming it, since a fee, weight cap, or breed rule can change without notice. The second is booking a room high in the building and far from an exit, which turns every walk into a production. The third is leaving a pet unattended where the hotel does not permit it, which risks both a complaint and a cleaning charge. The fourth is forgetting the essentials, a familiar bed, enough food, and waste bags, then scrambling to replace them on the road. The last is skipping the walk before check-in, so an under-exercised pet arrives restless and anxious. Plan around each of these and the stay goes smoothly for you, your pet, and the guests next door.
Planning the trip around your pet
The best pet-friendly trips are built around the animal from the start, not adjusted for it at the end. Choose a destination and route with easy access to green space, and break long drives into segments with regular stops. Match the hotel to your pet's size and temperament, and book early, since pet-friendly rooms are limited and fill quickly on busy weekends and holidays. Keep your pet's routine as close to home as possible: feed at the usual times, walk on a familiar schedule, and pack the items that smell like home. A little structure keeps a pet calm in an unfamiliar place, reduces the odds of accidents or anxiety, and makes the whole trip more enjoyable for both of you.
What a genuine welcome looks like
It is worth knowing the signs of a hotel that truly wants your pet there, rather than one that merely allows it. A genuine welcome shows up in small details: staff who greet your dog by name, a bowl of water at the front desk, treats offered at check-in, and clear, confident answers about the pet policy. The room is set up with hard floors or easy-clean surfaces, and the property points you to the nearest walking area without being asked. Compare that to a hotel that buries a long list of restrictions in the fine print and charges a steep nightly fee. Both may call themselves pet-friendly, but only one makes the trip easy, and the difference is usually visible within minutes of arrival.
Traveling with more than one pet
If you are traveling with two or more pets, the policy details matter even more, because per-room limits and per-pet fees can change the math quickly. Many hotels allow up to two pets per room, but some cap it at one, so confirm the number before you book rather than assuming. Ask whether the pet fee is charged per pet or per room, since a per-pet nightly fee doubles fast with two animals. Request a room with enough space for multiple beds and bowls, ideally on the ground floor for easier group walks. And be honest about the count at booking, since arriving with an extra, undeclared pet is the fastest way to a difficult conversation and a possible extra charge at the desk.
House rules that protect your deposit
A little care in the room keeps you welcome and protects any deposit. Bring a cover or sheet for furniture your pet is allowed on, lay a towel by the door for muddy paws, and keep your pet off the beds unless you have protected them. Clean up accidents immediately and report anything beyond a quick fix rather than hoping housekeeping misses it. Keep your pet leashed or crated when housekeeping may enter, and use the Do Not Disturb sign when your pet is alone in the room, where allowed. These habits cost nothing, they keep the room in good shape, and they make it easy for the hotel to welcome the next pet owner without hesitation.
The bottom line
If your dog is large, the weight limit is the only line in the policy that decides the booking. Choose a no-limit brand like Kimpton, Motel 6, or Red Roof, confirm the specific property, request a ground-floor room, and a big dog travels as easily as a small one.
Fuentes
- PetsVivo Compass directory
- Kimpton pet policy
- Motel 6 pet policy
- BringFido pet-friendly lodging
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FAQ Frequently Asked Questions
Kimpton, Motel 6, and Red Roof are among the most reliable, with no weight limit reported at most locations. Loews also has no strict size limit. Confirm the property.
When hotels set one, it is commonly 25 to 75 pounds. No-limit brands remove it entirely.
It varies. Some hotels apply the limit per dog and others to the combined weight of all pets, so ask when booking two dogs.
Not usually for size, though a pet fee may still apply. Kimpton charges no fee even with no weight limit.
Use PetsVivo Compass to filter for hotels with no weight limit and confirm before you book.
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