Hourly hotels in Uzbekistan
Hourly hotels — also called day-use rooms — let travellers rent a hotel room for a defined block of three, six or nine hours rather than committing to a full overnight stay. In Uzbekistan they fall under the same hospitality regulations as overnight stays, and most three-star and up hotels in Tashkent, Samarkand and Bukhara now sell them openly.
Open the app →How a day-use block actually works
A day-use block is a fixed-length window during which the room is yours. The hotel sets a daily window — for example, 10:00–22:00 — within which you choose a start time. The room is cleaned and reset before the next overnight check-in. You pay only for the block, not for a full night.
Typical pricing in Uzbekistan
On HourUse, three-hour blocks at three-star properties in Tashkent start around 95,000–125,000 so'm. Six-hour blocks run roughly 1.7× the three-hour rate; nine-hour blocks land near 2.4×. Five-star properties price proportionally higher. Tonight last-minute deals — overnight rates released within 24 hours of arrival — frequently see discounts of 30–50% versus the rack rate.
Where supply is densest
Tashkent has the deepest day-use inventory thanks to its concentration of business hotels in Yunusobod and Mirabad. Samarkand and Bukhara follow, anchored by their UNESCO old-town clusters and tour-bus rotation patterns. Khiva, Fergana and Nukus carry thinner but still functional supply.
By city
Frequently asked questions
Can I extend a 3-hour block to 6 hours mid-stay?
Do hourly rooms include breakfast?
Sources & references
Every figure on this page links back to a primary or reputable secondary source. Tourism data in Central Asia moves quickly — figures should be re-verified annually.