How to Make Your Aussie Hotel Room Homely (even for one night)

by | Last updated Dec 16, 2025 | Discover Australia Now, Live Australia - Acc | 0 comments

There are many reasons we stay in a hotel room while travelling Australia. It could be your chosen type of Australian accommodation or you just might want a night away from your tent or van. Whatever your reason, you will probably want to make your hotel room more homely so you get what you want our of your stay.

To turn a hotel room into a home, even if it is just for a night, there are things you can add to make it more homely. Read on to find out how I make my hotel room more homely while I travel.

 

 

Ready to book a room?

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Checking into a hotel should feel like the start of a break, but it often comes with a strange pause. You set your bag down, look around, and everything feels fine, yet nothing feels familiar. The room is clean, quiet, and carefully arranged, but it doesn’t invite you to relax. You’re aware that you’re just passing through.

That feeling matters more than people admit. When a space feels cold or temporary, it’s harder to unwind, sleep well, or feel settled, especially if you’re travelling often or staying longer than a night. Comfort isn’t about luxury. It’s about feeling at ease in the place you’re sleeping, changing clothes, and starting your day.

The good news is you don’t need much to change making your hotel room more homely. A few thoughtful choices can shift the mood of a hotel room quickly, making it feel calmer, warmer, and more like your own space. This guide focuses on practical, realistic ways to do exactly that, from small personal touches to simple adjustments that help you relax and feel at home, even when you’re far from it.

 

1. Choose a room with the things you want and need

 

When I travel and stay in hotels I like to choose a hotel room that offers me what I need and want as this makes me feel more comfortable, and at home. Things I look for in a hotel room include a queen bed (I just like this size), a microwave to heat my own dinner, tea and coffee making facilities, private bathroom with or without toiletries and free wifi. So what do you look for in a hotel room? Read my article on what to look for in a hotel room as you may or may not have realised you consider these things.

 

2. Add Personal and Cozy Touches

 

The first thing I do to make my hotel room more homely is to add personal and cozy touches. Hotel rooms are meant to work for everyone, which is why they often feel a little blank. The fastest way to change that is to add a few things that already feel familiar to you. You don’t need much. A couple of small touches can shift the room from “just a place to sleep” to somewhere you actually want to relax and enjoy.

 

Bring a familiar scent

 

Smell has a strong connection to comfort. A small candle, even if you never light it, a travel diffuser, or a room spray you already use at home can make the space feel calmer almost instantly. I’ve found that one familiar scent does more for a room than any decoration ever could.

 

Pack one comfort item you use every day

 

This could be your pillowcase, a soft scarf, a mug you like using in the morning or a pair of slippers. Using something you already reach for at home makes the room feel less temporary. A pillowcase in particular is a game changer. It smells like you, feels right, and makes the bed feel familiar on the first night. But I always like to travel with my slippers, my Cronulla Sharks slippers.  After a day wearing shoes I love putting my slippers on and flopping on the bed to watch TV!

 

Soften the lighting

 

Most hotel lighting is bright and unforgiving. If you can, bring a small portable lamp or warm-toned night light. Even moving a lamp lower, like onto a chair or bedside table, changes the mood of the room. Warmer light makes everything feel quieter and more relaxed, especially at night.

 

3. Create a Comfortable Atmosphere

 

Once you’ve added a few personal touches, the next step is making the room work for you. Hotel rooms often feel stiff because everything is set up for convenience, not comfort. A few small adjustments can make the space feel more relaxed and easier to settle into.

 

Let the room look lived in

 

You don’t need to rearrange furniture or unpack everything. Just claim the space in small ways. Clear the desk so it’s actually usable. Put your bag where you can reach it without thinking. Lay your book on the bedside table, hang your jacket on the chair, keep your water nearby. When the room reflects how you move through it, it stops feeling like a temporary stop and starts feeling familiar.

 

Play the sounds you love

 

A completely silent hotel room can feel oddly uncomfortable. Playing music you already love, a familiar podcast, or even soft background noise like rain can make the space feel warmer. It gives your brain something familiar to hold onto and makes settling in feel natural instead of awkward.

 

Set the temperature to suit you

 

Most rooms have heating or air-conditioning, but it’s easy to ignore it and adapt instead. Take a moment to adjust it properly. If the air is too cold or too dry, it affects how relaxed you feel without you even noticing. When the temperature is right, your body settles faster and everything feels easier.

 

4. Maintain Your Routines

 

A big reason hotel rooms feel off is because your usual rhythm disappears the moment you arrive. When your routines fall apart, even a comfortable room can feel unsettled. Keeping a few familiar habits goes a long way in making the space feel normal again.

 

Unpack even a little

 

You don’t need to turn the room upside down. Simply hanging the clothes you’ll wear next, laying out your toiletries, or choosing one spot to charge your phone helps you relax. When your things have a place, your mind follows. The room stops feeling temporary and starts feeling like somewhere you belong, even briefly.

 

Stick to your familiar rhythm

 

Think about what you normally do to wind down or start your day. Maybe it’s tea before bed, stretching in the morning, writing a few lines in a journal, or watching the same show as you fall asleep. Bringing these habits with you creates a sense of continuity. You don’t need to recreate your home perfectly. Just holding onto one or two routines can make a big difference.

 

Use the room intentionally

 

Instead of just passing through the space, give yourself a moment to be in it. Sit on the chair, lie on the bed without distractions, make a drink, or scroll through your phone for a bit. The more you use the room as a place to rest, not just sleep, the faster it starts to feel comfortable.

 

5. Enhance Your Comfort

 

Feeling at home in your hotel room really comes down to how comfortable you are in your body. When you’re physically at ease, everything else settles more easily too. A few small choices can make a hotel room feel far less temporary and more homely.

 

Bring your own snacks or drinks

 

Hotel minibars are expensive and rarely stocked with anything you actually want. Packing a few snacks you genuinely enjoy, some fruit, or your usual coffee or tea makes a quiet difference. Having something familiar to reach for in the evening or first thing in the morning helps the room feel less unfamiliar and more like your own space.

 

Recreate your bedtime routine

 

Sleep is often where hotel rooms feel the most foreign. The bed feels different, the pillows aren’t quite right, and the lighting can be too bright or oddly placed. Try to keep your usual wind-down routine intact. Wear the pyjamas you always sleep in, play the same calming sounds or music you use at home, or bring a small sleep spray if that’s part of your routine. When your body recognises the signals for rest, falling asleep becomes much easier.

 

Keep things tidy

 

It sounds small, but keeping your space neat makes it feel more homely. Mess can make a temporary room feel chaotic; a tidy one feels intentional. Even just folding clothes or clearing the table at the end of the day helps you relax in the space.

 

Use extra blankets or pillows

 

Lastly, on my suggestions of how to make your hotel room homely, if you sleep better with an extra pillow or prefer a heavier blanket, don’t hesitate to ask the front desk. Most hotels are happy to help, and comfort looks different for everyone. You’re not being demanding, you’re simply making the space work for you.

 

Are You Ready to Make Your Hotel Room More Homely?

 

Even if it is for one night, making yourself feel at home in your hotel room in Australia can go a long way to ensuring you have a good stay so you can keep on travelling.

 

 

Ready to book a room?

Check out Booking.com.

 

Black white and blue Cronulla Sharks slippers are one thing I take when I stay in hotels PIN.

Please like, pin and share. Thank you.

Sharyn McCullum with a glass of beer in front of her at the Coldstream Brewery, Yarra Valley.

Hi, I’m Sharyn, the creator of this blog. I’ve been travelling all my life thanks to my dad who worked for an Australian airline. Nowadays I like to stay on the ground and discover Australia one road trip, one city or town and one beach at a time. Join me to discover your own Australia now.

 

My Essential Travel Resources that help me discover Australia now.

* For accommodation I book a bed in a hostel through HostelWorld or a hotel room via Booking.com. For free accommodation I house sit through Trusted Housesitters.
* I purchase camping & caravanning gear through Caravan RV Camping, Amazon, Anaconda and Outback Equipment. I power up with a Bluetti Solar Powerbank.
* For clothing and travel gear I like North Face  (particularly their jackets and their hybrid backpack/suitcase).
* For bags (I take my messenger bag everywhere) I like Bagsmart.
* If I need to rent a car I check out options at DiscoverCars and campervans at Jucy. And I find my way with Hema Maps.
* When I need travel insurance I get a policy through World Nomads or SafetyWing. For car and van insurance I use the state auto clubs like RACV.
* I protect myself online with a VPN from NordVPN.

 

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