I stayed for two days. The hotel is clean, well located, and the room itself is good. Unfortunately, the bad experience started at check-in. The receptionist barely greeted me, gave me the room card and number without any explanation (he didn’t even white the room number at anywhere), and provided no basic information such as Wi-Fi password, breakfast location, or schedule. Speaking of breakfast, it was very poor as well.
The worst part happened during checkout. The receptionist asked if I had consumed anything, and I said no. He then went to the room to “check” and came back claiming that three sodas and a box of chocolates were missing — even though I don’t even drink soda. I explained that the only thing I had consumed during my stay was one bottle of water on the first night.
He then started speaking to me in a threatening and very embarrassing manner, accusing me of lying and pressuring me to pay for items I did not consume. When I asked for a receipt or proof of the charges, he refused to provide anything and simply handed me the card machine with an amount already entered of about $50 USD for three sodas and chocolate.
After more than 20 years traveling internationally, this was honestly one of the worst hotel experiences I’ve ever had. Sadly, it is the second time I’ve experienced something similar in the beautiful Buenos Aires, where it clearly feels like tourists are targeted in bad faith. It felt like pure extortion.