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We have reserved a room from 1 April to 1 June 2020.

Does that mean that one should check out on the 1st or the 2nd of June 2020?

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    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this question is not about English but about booking practices.
    – Lambie
    Commented Feb 1, 2020 at 23:18
  • They should check out on the 2nd of June. Hotel reservations are about nights rather than daytime. So, the last date does not include the night of that date. It only shows you the check-out day.
    – Yunus
    Commented Jun 27, 2023 at 7:28
  • I feel it's important to add that we British, anyway, never talk about booking a place from 'one day to another'. In that context, we only ever speak of 'one date to another'. If the booking is for a set length of time with no specified start or end, it's referred to as for 'a number of days…' 'A number of dates' would imply more than one booking, with different starts or ends. Such periods could over-lap or be consecutive only by irrelevant co-incidence From 'one day to another' is like 'day-to-day' meaning average, hum-drum or unremarkable; nothing to do with dates or given days. Commented Oct 26 at 16:14
  • If the OQ actually about bookings, then I agree with Lambie; Close it. However, is 'booking' the actual point, or simply an example of day/date/number sequences? Commented Oct 26 at 16:17

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enter image description hereYou checkout on the 1st of June 2020.

Go on any room booking site, as I just did. See on the left that I was asking to check-in on the 9th and check-out on the 10th. Your question is whether that makes one day or two days. Look on the far right and see $200 for 1 night.

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