Hotel Freestanding Bathtub Final Room Safety Inspection Records for Risk Managers
Risk manager guide for final bathtub room safety inspections, 30 day recurrence planning, 4 defect checks, floor-dry note, tub condition photo, and correction owner.
Answer: Risk managers should record 4 defect checks, 1 floor-dry note, tub photo, correction owner, and 30 day recurrence plan before release.
Why final room safety records matter
Freestanding bathtubs affect guest safety, housekeeping release, and engineering maintenance. A final room safety record keeps floor condition, tub surface, drain performance, fixture stability, and correction ownership visible before the room returns to inventory.
| Safety field | Risk reason |
|---|---|
| 4 defect checks | Reviews surface, drain, floor, and fixture stability together. |
| 1 floor-dry note | Flags standing water conditions before guests enter. |
| 30 day recurrence plan | Turns final release into a repeat inspection cycle. |
FAQ
What should a final bathtub safety inspection include?
Include floor condition, tub surface, drain function, fixture stability, photos, and correction owner.
Why add a 30 day recurrence plan?
A recurrence plan prevents room safety checks from stopping after the initial turnover inspection.
Who should review safety records?
Risk, engineering, housekeeping, and operations teams should review them before room release.
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