🏨 The Hotel Room Nobody Stays In
Some doors should never be opened.

Every has its haunted house, its cursed building, or its dark legend. But there’s one kind of story that chills travelers the most — the tale of the hotel room that nobody dares to stay in.
🚪 The Room With No Number
In some hotels, there’s a floor with no 13th number. Superstition, they say. But in others, it’s not the floor they hide… it’s a specific room.
Guests checking in are never told about it. The door might be sealed, disguised as a utility closet, or just “under renovation” forever. But staff members know the truth: something terrible happened there.
🕯️ What Really Happened?
The stories vary from place to place, but the themes are eerily similar:
A businessman was found dead under mysterious circumstances, his face frozen in terror.
A bride took her own life after being left at the altar, her spirit still wandering the halls in her wedding dress.
Guests who stayed there reported waking up to someone sitting at the edge of their bed — someone who vanished when they screamed.
📞 The Disturbing Experiences
Former staff often share the most unsettling details:
Phones in the cursed room ringing the front desk, even though no one was checked in.
Maids refusing to clean it after hearing whispers from inside when the door was locked.
Guests in the next room complaining about banging on the walls late at night — only to be told the “empty” room was on the other side.
🌍 Famous Cases
Room 873, Banff Springs Hotel (Canada): Allegedly sealed after a family was murdered inside. Guests claim they see bloody handprints reappear on the walls.
Room 428, Ohio University (USA): Students report heavy furniture moving by itself and a man’s ghostly face peering from the window.
Room 3502, Biltmore Hotel (USA): Said to be so haunted that guests rarely last the whole night.
The pattern is the same: the room exists, but the hotel does everything possible to keep it off the books.
đź‘€ Would You Stay?
Some thrill-seekers beg to stay in these rooms, convinced they’ll catch proof of the paranormal. A handful do — but many check out before dawn, shaken, pale, and refusing to talk about what happened.
Others say the rooms should remain sealed forever, because if the dead want peace, disturbing them may come with a price.
⚰️ Final Thought
The next time you check into a hotel, look carefully. Notice if a floor skips a number… or if there’s a hallway with a door that looks just a little too new compared to the rest.
And if you ever hear the front desk say, “That room is unavailable,” remember: it might not be broken.
It might just be haunted.



Comments (1)
I have stayed in hotels with no 13th floor before.