Nobody hands you a manual on shared living when you move into a hostel. The printed house rules cover curfew timings and no-smoking zones. But the real rules, the ones that decide whether you're the favourite roommate or the person everyone avoids, are never written down. These 15 hostel etiquette rules India residents follow are learned through awkward situations, passive-aggressive notes on the fridge, and that one floor meeting nobody wanted.
Whether you're moving into a hostel in Delhi, a PG in Jaipur, a Koramangala stay in Bangalore, or a Kothrud PG in Pune, these norms are consistent across cities. Follow them, and your hostel life goes from survivable to genuinely enjoyable.
1. The Bathroom Has a Queue, Respect It
Morning rush hour in a hostel bathroom is real. Six people, two bathrooms, everyone has class at 9 AM.
- Keep your shower under 10 minutes during peak hours (7-9 AM)
- Don't take your phone in for a 30-minute scroll session
- Clean the floor after you shower, wipe hair from the drain, hang the mug back
- Your toiletries go back to your room or your toiletry bag. Don't colonize the bathroom shelf.
If your hostel has a geyser with a timer, don't reset it for an extra 20 minutes of hot water when others are waiting.
2. After 10 PM, Your Room Is a Library
Hostel walls are thin. Everyone discovers this on night one. After 10 PM:
- Use earphones for music, calls, and videos, always
- Voice calls go to the corridor or common area
- If you're typing, the mechanical keyboard that sounds like a typewriter is not appreciated
- Group study? Take it to the common room.
This is not about being strict. It's about recognizing that three of your five roommates have an 8 AM exam and fell asleep at 11.
For more on managing roommate dynamics, read the hostel roommate problems and solutions guide.
3. Label Your Food or Lose It
The shared fridge is a war zone in every Indian hostel. Unlabelled food is, by hostel law, fair game.
- Put your name and date on anything you store in the common fridge
- Tiffin boxes from home? Eat them within two days or they become a science experiment
- Don't eat someone else's food without asking, even if it's "just a little"
- Clean out your expired items every weekend. Nobody wants to open the fridge to the smell of last week's dal.
4. Return What You Borrow, Within 24 Hours
Borrowing is part of hostel life. The charger, the iron, the scissors, the kettle. The rule is simple: return it the same day or the next morning. Don't wait for the person to ask for it back. And return it in the same condition, a charger with a frayed wire because you yanked it out is not acceptable.
5. The Common Area Is Not Your Bedroom
Common rooms, dining halls, and study rooms are shared spaces. That means:
- Don't spread your books and laptop across an entire 6-person table
- Clean up after yourself, plates in the sink, wrappers in the bin
- Don't claim a specific seat as "yours." Rotation is the norm.
- If you're video calling, use earphones or go to your room.
6. Introduce Your Guests, Do Not Sneak Them In
Most hostels have a guest policy. Follow it. But beyond the rules:
- Introduce your visitor to your roommates. A quick "This is my friend Rahul, he is visiting for the afternoon" takes three seconds.
- Don't have guests in the room when your roommate is studying or sleeping
- If your guest needs to use the bathroom, show them the common one, not your shared room's attached bathroom without asking your roommate.
A quick introduction makes your roommate comfortable. Don't let strangers appear in shared spaces without context.
7. Respect Study Hours
Many hostels have designated study hours (typically 7-10 PM or 9-11 PM). Even if yours doesn't, the norm exists:
- Keep noise to a minimum during common exam periods
- If you're done studying and want to watch something, use earphones
- Don't interrupt someone with earphones in and a textbook open, unless the building is on fire.
8. Laundry Etiquette Is Real
The common washing machine serves 20-50 people. Treat it accordingly:
- Remove your clothes within 15 minutes of the cycle ending. Nobody wants to touch your wet clothes to load theirs.
- Don't overload the machine. Two loads of a normal amount is better than one jammed load that doesn't clean properly.
- Wipe the drum after washing heavily soiled clothes
- The drying line is shared, take your dry clothes down promptly.
For a complete laundry system, check the hostel laundry guide.
9. Clean Your Mess Immediately
This applies to everything, the kitchen counter after you make Maggi, the bathroom floor after you shave, the desk after you eat at it. The person who uses a space after you shouldn't have to clean up your leftovers.
Specific common offences:
- Hair in the sink or shower drain
- Tea stains on the kitchen counter
- Crumbs on the study desk
- Toothpaste spit left in the basin
Our hostel room cleaning routine has a 15-minute daily schedule that keeps shared spaces livable.
10. Air Freshener Is Not Optional in a Shared Room
Shared rooms develop a smell after two weeks if nobody addresses it. The sources: unwashed clothes in an open bag, shoes stored inside the room, food containers left overnight, and, honestly, people who skip showers.
- Keep dirty laundry in a closed bag, not an open pile
- Shoes stay outside the room or in a closed shoe rack
- Open the window for 30 minutes every morning
- A ₹100 room freshener or camphor blocks in the corner make a real difference.
11. Negotiate AC and Fan Settings Like Adults
The eternal hostel conflict: one person is cold, another is sweating. Handle it:
- Discuss a default temperature (24-25 degrees is the standard compromise for AC rooms)
- The person who wants it colder wears lighter clothes. The person who wants it warmer uses a blanket.
- Fan speed follows the same rule, speed 3 is usually the middle ground
- Never change the setting while your roommate is asleep without asking.
12. WiFi Bandwidth Is Shared, Act Like It
Downloading a 40 GB game during peak hours (8-11 PM) is the hostel equivalent of hogging the bathroom. Schedule large downloads for 2-4 AM or early morning. If you're torrenting, limit your upload speed so you're not choking the connection for everyone else.
13. Do Not Be the Alarm That Snoozes Eight Times
Set one alarm. Wake up to it. If you need multiple alarms, you need earlier sleep, not more alarms. Your roommate shouldn't have to listen to your phone go off every 5 minutes from 6:00 to 6:40 AM. Use a vibration alarm on a fitness band if you're a heavy sleeper.
14. Knock Before Entering, Even Your Own Room
If the door is closed, knock. Your roommate might be changing, on a private call, or just having a moment alone. This is the simplest rule on this list and the one most frequently ignored. A closed door is a signal. Respect it.
A closed door means knock first. It takes one second and saves awkward moments.
15. Hostel Etiquette for Conflicts, Handle Them Directly, Not on the Group Chat
If your roommate's habit bothers you, loud calls at midnight, borrowing without asking, leaving the bathroom wet, tell them directly. One-on-one. Privately. Don't post about it on the hostel WhatsApp group, don't complain to the warden as your first step, and absolutely don't leave passive-aggressive sticky notes.
A 2-minute honest conversation fixes 90% of hostel conflicts. The other 10% need a warden or floor meeting, but try the direct conversation first.
The One Hostel Etiquette Rule That Covers Everything
Treat shared spaces the way you'd want them when you walk in. Leave the bathroom dry, the kitchen clean, the common room quiet at night, and the fridge organised. Hostel life is not about being perfect; it's about being considerate enough that everyone can coexist without resentment.
A clean shared kitchen after use, the simplest sign that a hostel has good residents.
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