Quick question.
If someone asked you to name the most wasteful product in hospitality, what would you choose?
Plastic straws?
Plastic bags?
Takeaway coffee cups?
Most people would.
And they'd probably be wrong.
The hospitality industry has spent years removing visible waste. Plastic straws disappeared from bars. Toiletry bottles are slowly being replaced. Sustainability reports are becoming thicker by the year.
Yet some of the industry's largest waste streams remain quietly hidden in plain sight.
Let's play a game.
How many of these made your list?
1. Hotel Slippers
A guest stays for two nights.
The slipper can last for years.
Luxury hotels in the U.S. alone discard more than 120 million pairs annually.
Many are worn once.
Many are never worn at all.

2. Miniature Toiletries
Those tiny bottles feel insignificant.
Until you realize billions are distributed worldwide every year.
One of hospitality's biggest sustainability success stories has been replacing them with refillable systems.
3. Plastic Water Bottles
Globally, more than one million plastic bottles are purchased every minute.
Hotels have made progress, but bottled water remains one of the industry's largest visible waste streams.
4. Coffee Capsules
Small enough to fit in your hand.
Difficult enough to create a recycling headache.
Many pods combine multiple materials that are hard to separate and recover.
5. Laundry Bags
A product so forgettable that guests often leave it untouched.
Yet millions continue to be placed in rooms every year.
6. Key Cards
One hotel stay.
One plastic card.
Billions produced annually.
7. Vanity Kits
Cotton buds.
Razors.
Sewing kits.
Shower caps.
Often individually wrapped, multiplying waste before they're even used.
8. Conference Lanyards
The hidden champion of corporate event waste.
Used for a day.
Stored forever or discarded immediately.
9. Room Service Packaging
One meal can generate a surprising amount of waste.
Containers.
Lids.
Cutlery.
Condiments.
Napkins.
Repeat thousands of times.
10. Branded Giveaways
The hospitality industry loves gifting.
The problem?
Not every gift creates value.
Some create clutter.
Others create waste.

The Surprising Thing About This List
Notice what isn't here?
Plastic straws.
Not because they don't matter.
Because they taught us something bigger.
The real lesson of the straw wasn't the straw.
It was the question:
Why are we creating waste in the first place?
That's where the conversation around sustainable hotel amenities is heading.
The challenge is no longer finding better ways to throw things away.
The challenge is designing systems where less gets thrown away at all.
What Hospitality's Smartest Operators Are Starting To Realize
The most innovative hotel sustainability initiatives are no longer focused on products.
They're focused on product lifecycles.
Where materials come from.
How long they stay in use.
What happens when guests are finished with them.
And whether they can become something useful again.
That's the difference between a linear economy and a circular one.
One creates waste.
The other creates value.
Again and again.
A Different Question
Perhaps the future of hospitality isn't asking:
"Which products are sustainable?"
Perhaps it's asking:
"Which products should still be disposable?"
The answer may be fewer than we think.
At Primal, that's the question we're most interested in exploring.
Because hospitality has spent decades perfecting the guest experience.
The next opportunity is perfecting the lifecycle behind it.