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Unable to afford rent, a couple saves Rs. 1 lakh annually by living in a Florida hotel room

Unable to afford rent, a couple saves Rs. 1 lakh annually by living in a Florida hotel room
Facing soaring rent prices and a reduced income, a Pensacola couple transitioned from a $2,300 monthly rental to a $307 weekly hotel room. This unconventional move allows them to save approximately $12,000 annually, which they plan to use for purchasing land and building a tiny home.
As rent prices soar across the United States, some families are rethinking what “home” really means. In Pensacola, Florida, one couple has chosen a seemingly unconventional method of living in a hotel room, and for them, it helps save money!According to reports by The New York Post, Maranda Bowers, 47, and her husband John, 40, switched from a $2,300‑a‑month rented house to a one‑bedroom hotel room costing them $307 per week and now claim to save about $12,000 (roughly ₹11 lakh) a year.
Unable to afford rent, a couple saves Rs.1 lakh annually in rent by living in a Florida hotel room
Representative Image


A cheaper switch from house to hotel

According to The New York Post, the couple previously lived in a two‑storey, three‑bedroom rental house in Pensacola, paying $2,300 per month in rent. After John’s workplace accident in 2023 left his right hand crushed and ended his job, the couple’s income shrank dramatically, making the rent unaffordable.Maranda says they lock in a predictable weekly bill and avoid the need for a big security deposit or last‑minute rent negotiations. She told the outlet, “The biggest positive about hotel life is you don’t have to spend thousands of dollars on rent. You don’t need to put together a security deposit or pay a month’s rent in advance.”

Simple living in a mini apartment‑style room

The hotel room functions like a small apartment, with a kitchenette that includes a two‑burner stove and a full‑size refrigerator, allowing the couple to cook most of their meals instead of eating out. The hotel also offers optional cleaning and fresh linens, which helps keep life tidy without a full‑time household staff.
Maranda has turned a corner of the room into a small workspace using dividers, so she can run her cleaning business more comfortably. “It isn’t luxurious, but it is worth what we save,” she said to the NYP.She added, “We don’t have to worry about covering rent every month. A lot of people also think living in a hotel room means we have to spend lots of money eating out, but that is not the case. I cook all the time. I cooked Thanksgiving and Christmas for half the hotel.”



How they plan to use the savings

The couple’s long‑term goal, as they told reporters, is to use their annual savings, around $12,000, to buy a plot of land and eventually build a tiny home. “We want to live simply, go on vacations, and live our life rather than put all our money into a huge home,” Maranda said.She also explained that with their children now grown, the idea of “communal living” doesn’t bother them, and they would love a small, low‑maintenance home instead of a big house.
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