Hostel and hotel reservations worldwide
- Canada: Toronto recommended hostel
- Canada: Vancouver recommended hostel
- Australia: Airlie Beach recommended hostel
- Australia: Alice Springs recommended hostel
- Australia: Brisbane recommended hostel
- Australia: Byron Bay recommended hostel
- Australia: Cairns recommended budget hostel
- Australia: Cairns recommended mid-range hostel
- Australia: Coral Bay recommended hostel
- Australia: Darwin recommended hostel
- Australia: Hervey Bay recommended hostel
- Australia: Magnetic Island recommended hostel
- Australia: Melbourne recommended hostel
- Australia: Mission Beach recommended hostel
- Australia: Perth recommended hostel
- Australia: Sydney recommended hostel
- Cook Islands: Rarotonga recommended hostel
- Fiji: Nadi recommended hostel
- Hawaii: Honolulu recommended hostel
- Mexico: Mexico City recommended hostel
- New Zealand: Auckland recommended hostel
- New Zealand: Bay of Islands recommended hostel
- New Zealand: Christchurch recommended hostel
- New Zealand: Queenstown recommended hostel
- New Zealand: Rotorua recommended hostel
- New Zealand: Wellington recommended hostel
- Singapore: Singapore recommended hostel
- South Africa: Cape Town recommended hostel
- South Africa: Johannesburg recommended hostel
- Thailand: Bangkok recommended hostel
- USA: Arizona recommended hostel
- USA: LA recommended hostel
- USA: New York recommended hostel
- USA: San Francisco recommended hostel
- Vietnam: Ho Chi Minh City recommended hostel
- UK: Belfast recommended hostel
- UK: London recommended hostel London Bridge
- UK: London recommended hostel Russell Square
- Malaysia: Borneo recommended hostel
- Belize: Sarteneja recommended hostel
- Japan: Tokyo recommended hostel
- China: Beijing recommended hostel
- Argentina: Buenos Aires recommended hostel
- Peru: Lima recommended hostel
- Brazil: Rio De Janiero recommended hostel
- Indonesia: Bali recommended hostel
- General advice
- Guide to choosing a good hostel
- Hostel safety check-list
- First timer guide to hostels
- The guide to living with other people
- July 2006: Kiwi House, New Zealand
- May 2006: Belfast International Youth Hostel
- April 2006: Nomads Capital Wellington, New Zealand
- March 2006: Backpackers Internatonal, Cook Islands
- February 2006: Wake Up! Sydney Central
- January 2006 - Samesun Backpackers, Vancouver
- November 2005 - Auckland Central Backpackers
- August 2005 - Hangout, Singapore
- May 2005 - Ashanti lodge, Cape Town
- March 2005 - The Generator, London
- January 2005 - Wake Up! Sydney Central
- December 2004 - Railway Square YHA, Sydney
- November 2004 - Original Backpackers Lodge, Sydney
- October 2004 - Global Village Toronto
- Free beer vouchers
- Argentina
- Australia
- Belize
- Cook Islands
- Fiji
- Guatemala
- Hawaii
- Honduras
- Indonesia
- Japan
- Malaysia
- Mexico
- New Zealand
- Portugal
- Singapore
- South Africa
- Thailand
- UK
- USA
- Vietnam
- Zambia
- Stay in a barn
- Stay in a castle
- Stay in a lighthouse
- Stay in a prison
- Stay on a boat
- Stay underground
- Ice hotels
- Stay in a railway car
- Stay in a Japanese ryokan
- About our recommended hostels
First timers guide to hostels

Rachel Ricks writes...
Booking ahead
For your first night after touch-down in a new place, it’s definitely worth securing a room in advance. Many hostels allow you to book online; others you’ll need to phone.
Get your hands on a good, up-to-date guidebook or surf the net - you’ll find lots of hostels to choose between, so get choosing. Make sure your chosen hostel is within your budget and in a good location - i.e. quite central but not next to a railway station or motorway slip-road, nor in a red light district... have you got the picture? Listen out for recommendations... and warnings... and take heed.
There are various discount cards that can save you money in hostels all over the world. It’s worth looking into these - you may have to shell out a few quid, but it won’t take you many nights before you make it back in savings.
What to expect
- Basic, simple accommodation, most likely décor of the '70s era, even pine-panelled walls and ceilings if you’re really lucky.
- Shared washing facilities and bedrooms - dorms of up to 20 people, some mixed, some single-sex - your choice.
- Friendly, happy people.
- Alcohol.
- Annoying times, great times.
Arrival/ checking in
- Don’t be scared - any tales of being bog-washed by Aussies drunk on petrol are completely imagined.
- The hostel is a friendly habitat - everyone is in the same boat and in a chilled, holiday frame of mind.
- Settle yourself into your room and if you’re in a shared dorm, introduce yourself to your roommates.
- Break the ice by asking where stuff like the bathroom and kitchen are - people secretly like being know-it-alls.
- Ask where the nearest bar is, and you’re away.
Your first night, lying in bed, you may well think: 'S***! What have I done?!' or you may well be passed out in a drunken haze and won’t think it until the next morning... All you need to remember is that everyone thinks it at some stage and you will get over it and go on to have the best time of your life.
For the first couple of days, keep yourself busy. Get down to the social room and see where everyone else has been and where they’re planning to go, chat up the receptionist and get booked on some excursions and events and send emails home to assure everyone of your safe arrival.
Securing your stuff 
Check out where you can stash valuables such as passport, travellers’ cheques and documents - if anywhere. The best bet is to keep these on you in a money belt at all times, but if this gets annoying, enquire about safes. Under no circumstances stuff valuables under your mattress - contrary to popular belief, items do not become untouchable if ‘hidden’ here.
Familiarise yourself with fire exits - it doesn’t take a second but could save your ass - you know it makes sense.
The next step
Before long you’ll probably have made a gang of new mates and be gallivanting onto your next destination together, which means you probably stop reading about here *sob*.
But don’t panic if this isn’t the case. If you’re not getting on in this hostel, there’s nothing stopping you from moving on to another one - or another town altogether - after all, you’re a free agent and the world is your oyster now!
Get up bright and early, pack a daypac with essentials for the day and any valuables - most hostels will store your backpack for a day reasonably safely - and do some legwork. Stock up on maps and tourist guides and wander round at leisure to familiarise yourself with the area. You’ve arrived!
FEMALE TRAVELLERS ![]() |
When browsing our recommended hostels, look out for this symbol, which indicates that a hostel has girls-only dorms...Click here >> for our female travel zone |
- Sarong - a multitude of uses including bedsheet, wall-covering, towel... also handy for a quick cover-up if caught with your pants half-mast.
- A sleeping bag and / or sleeping bag liner - some hostels don’t provide such bedding.
- Earplugs - you know somebody is gonna snore.
- Plenty of padlocks
- Torch

Click here >> for gapyear.com's recommended hostels
Click here >> for our accommodation zone
Click here >> for our hostel safety checklist

FEMALE TRAVELLERS
When browsing our 