🍪 We use cookies to analyze traffic and improve your experience. Privacy Policy
Sort & Filters
Sort By
Earliest Check-in
Latest Check-out
Price: Lowest first
Price: Highest first
Top Rated
Points Boost
Nearest
Filters
Hotel Services Hotel Services
Accepts Cash
Wi-Fi
Baggage Storage
Restaurant
Hotel Bar
Room Service
Business Amenities Business Amenities
Board Room
Business Center
Printers
Fitness Features Fitness Features
Fitness Center
Pool: Outdoor
Pool: Heated
Accessibility Accessibility
Parking Available
Pet Friendly
Wheelchair Access

5 day use hotels sorted by top rated from 25 USD in San Diego, United States

Sort & Filters
Map List
MasterKey Loyalty Members
earn points on every booking towards free stays.
Look for the Boost iconfor more points!
Turn Holiday Madness into Magic Turn Holiday Madness into Magic
Turn Holiday Madness into Magic
WIN a Daycation!

Booking a day use room in sun-drenched San Diego? Fine-tune your itinerary with some tips and fun facts to make the best of your time in this warm weather playground.

Discovering the Sunny City by the Bay via San Diego Day Rooms

Eight San Diego Facts to Swoon Over

  1. San Diego produces more avos than any other spot in the United States and celebrates with an annual avocado festival.
  2. The biggest collection of original Dr. Seuss manuscripts can be found at UCSD’s Geisel Library.
  3. One of the city’s most iconic hotels, the Hotel Del Coronado displayed the first electrically lit outdoor Christmas tree in 1904.
  4. San Diego’s average year-round temperature is 70 degrees (hello sunshine).
  5. The San Diego Zoo was the birthplace of Hua Mei, the first giant panda cub to survive to adulthood in the United States.
  6. Built in 1863, the Star of India is the fourth-oldest ship afloat in the United States and the world’s oldest active sailing ship.
  7. True to the skate, surf and snowboard lifestyle, Olympian Shaun White and X-Games aficionado Tony Hawk both were raised in San Diego.
  8. The Giant Dipper at Belmont Park (built in 1925) is one of two U.S. roller coasters officially on the National Historic Landmark — the other being its slightly older wooden sibling, the Giant Dipper (1924) in Santa Cruz, CA.