En resumen
- Youth hostels cost €15-30/night in a dorm — 3 to 5 times cheaper than a standard hotel.
- Real questions before going: is it safe? How does it work? What do you bring?
- It's the accommodation type that generates the most encounters — by design, not accident.
The first time you hear about youth hostels, you always ask the same questions. Will I be sleeping with strangers? Are my things safe? Is it dirty? Will I be able to sleep? These questions are normal. And the answers are less complicated than you think.
What exactly is a youth hostel?
A youth hostel (or hostel) is accommodation built for travelers on tight budgets who also want to meet people. The main difference from a hotel: you share your room in a dorm of 4 to 12 beds. Each bed comes with a mattress, pillow and blanket, with an individual locker for your belongings. Shared spaces — kitchen, lounge, bar, terrace — are communal. That's where things happen.
What to expect from a good hostel
The best hostels (rated above 8/10 on Hostelworld) offer: decent beds with privacy curtains in modern dorms, lockers with padlocks, clean showers, a equipped kitchen for self-catering, reliable WiFi, and a lively common space where people talk naturally. Premium chains like Generator and Selina add an on-site bar, stylish design, and organized events.
The safety question — straight answer
Your valuables: use the locker. Always. Bring your own padlock. Passport, phone, money — in the locker or on you, never left in plain sight on the bed. Avoid: hostels rated below 7/10, reviews mentioning theft or no reception. On Hostelworld, always read the 5 most recent reviews before booking.
What to bring
Essential: padlock (for the locker), earplugs (dorms can be noisy), eye mask (if you're sensitive to light), flip-flops (for shared showers), microfiber towel (light, dries fast). Useful but not essential: universal adapter, small torch to avoid waking others at night.
The unwritten rules of dorm life
Silence after 11pm. Prepare your things for the next day before going to sleep, not at 7am in the dark. Lights off when others are sleeping — use your torch. Phone on silent (alarm clocks that wake an entire dorm are frowned upon). Shared space = shared respect.
Why hostels generate the most encounters
Hostels are built for people to talk to each other. The shared kitchen creates natural conversations. The lounge, bar, and terrace are designed for exchange. And to speed things up: HollyFriends shows you in 30 seconds who else is staying at the same hostel, filtered by age. You no longer have to wait to bump into someone in the corridor — you already know who's there before you even go downstairs.