Where to Stay
Rooms and rentals that actually sleep 5, 6 or 7 — without booking two rooms.

Hotels that sleep 5 or more in one room (and how to actually book them)
Standard hotel rooms cap out at four. Here is how families of five, six and seven find a single room that fits everyone — without paying for two.

Suite vs two rooms vs a rental: which is cheapest for a family of 6?
A side-by-side look at the three ways big families sleep — by cost, privacy and sanity.

When the Cap Forces Two Rooms: How to Split One Family's Reservation Without Losing Money or Adjoining Rooms
Booking two rooms for one family creates four specific risks — no guarantee of adjoining rooms, double resort fees, split loyalty credit, and mismatched cancellation policies. Here is how to handle all four before you pay.

Cabins & Rentals That Sleep 8: Big-Family Booking Guide
Finding a rental that genuinely sleeps eight — not four with a sofa-bed footnote — requires knowing where to search and what questions to ask before you pay the cleaning fee.

What to Say When You Call a Hotel Direct to Fit a 5th or 6th Person in One Room
A specific phone and email script for families asking a hotel to accommodate one or two extra children, including the exact questions to ask about rollaways, sofa beds, maximum occupancy, and age cutoffs.

The Booking-Site "Max Children" Cap: Why You Can't Add 3+ Kids (and 7 Ways Around It)
Booking engines at Booking.com, Expedia, and Hotels.com silently cap children per room at two or three, blocking families of five or more from completing a reservation. Here is exactly why that happens and every workaround that actually works.

Rollaways, Cots & Sofa Beds: Fitting 6 Into a "4-Max" Room
When no suite is available, families of six can legitimately fit into a standard room with the right advance requests. Here is the step-by-step process and what to actually expect.

2-Bedroom Suite Hotels: The Big-Family Sleep-Setup Guide
A two-bedroom hotel suite labeled for six people can mean wildly different things. This guide decodes the actual bed configurations and explains which layouts work for different family compositions.

Max Occupancy vs Max Bedding: The Hotel Rule That Decides If Your Family of 6 Fits
Hotels publish two different numbers — maximum occupancy and maximum bedding — and confusing them is why families of six get turned away at check-in despite a valid reservation. Here is how to read both figures and use them correctly.

Best Hotel Chains for Families of 5 and 6 (Suite Layouts)
Not all hotel suites are built the same. These six chains have documented two-bedroom suite layouts that genuinely sleep five or six people without requiring a rollaway.

The 3-Generation Rental: How to Split Bedrooms, Bathrooms and the Bill With Grandparents Along
A well-configured vacation rental with grandparents costs less per person than two separate hotel rooms and sleeps everyone better — if you know which bedroom and bathroom configurations actually work.

Vacation Rental vs Hotel for a Family of 6: When Each Wins
The break-even point between a vacation rental and two hotel rooms for six people is usually around $180 per night in rental savings — but the real math includes meals, laundry, and sanity.

Ski-In/Ski-Out Lodging That Actually Sleeps 6+: What to Book When 4-Person Condos Won't Cut It
Most ski resort listings max out at four guests without a pullout sofa situation. Here is how to find true six-to-eight-sleeper ski-in/ski-out properties and the group chalet deals that reward big families.

How to Actually Get Connecting Rooms (Not Just Request Them)
Connecting rooms are not bookable online at most chains — they require a specific phone call with exact language. This step-by-step guide gives you the script.

Connecting Rooms vs Family Suite for 6: Cost & Space Compared
A two-bedroom suite and two connecting standard rooms can cost within $30 of each other per night, but the livability difference is enormous. We run the actual numbers.

Hotels That Sleep 6 in One Room (Chains That Actually Allow It)
Most hotel rooms cap occupancy at 4, but a handful of chains legally permit 6 guests in a single room. Here is exactly which brands allow it and what the room actually looks like.