Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - What is a homestay?

What is a homestay?

Literally, a homestay is a place where people, or simply ordinary people, spend the night and sleep at night. Together, it is the place where ordinary people sleep. The place where ordinary people sleep is naturally the home of ordinary people.

B&B refers to the use of idle rooms in self-occupied houses, or idle houses, combined with local humanities, natural landscapes, ecology, environmental resources and agricultural, forestry, fishery and animal husbandry production activities, as a family sideline business, to provide accommodation for tourists living in rural areas. B&B is different from traditional hotels. It may not have advanced and luxurious facilities, but it can make people experience the local customs.

Characteristics of homestay

On a small scale, B&B is generally between 5- 10 rooms. After all, B&B evolved from family ties. Generally, there are only a few owners of B&B, so it is difficult to manage too many rooms. The scale of a hotel is generally dozens of times that of a B&B, but there are also many people. B&B also has the function of bearing traditional and characteristic culture, and architectural culture and catering culture are prominent in B&B format.