What if a guest loses their cloakroom number?
A guest has lost their cloakroom number. What do you do? Protocol, identification procedures and legal aspects.
On every busy evening, it happens at least once: a guest returns to the cloakroom without their number. With a fixed procedure, you can resolve this calmly and fairly — without arguments and without giving the wrong coat away. Below you’ll find the protocol, plus how to structurally reduce the number of lost numbers.
Why a fixed protocol is important
Without an agreement, every staff member improvises — and that’s exactly when coats get handed to the wrong person. A fixed protocol protects your guest (who gets their coat back), your employee (who doesn’t have to guess) and you (who can demonstrate you acted carefully). Discuss it in advance with your entire team.
Step 1 — Ask for a description
Have the guest describe the coat: colour, brand, type and especially the contents of the pockets. Someone who knows exactly what is in the pockets is almost certainly the owner. Always ask this before you start looking yourself, so the description is independent.
Step 2 — Compare with the remaining coats
At the end of the night, only the unclaimed coats remain. The description usually matches one coat on the rack immediately. If the coats are hanging in numerical order, this is done in no time.
Step 3 — Ask for identification if in doubt
If it’s an expensive coat, or you’re uncertain, ask for ID and note the details. This way you protect yourself in case of a later dispute. Include this in your cloakroom regulations too, so guests know this may happen.
Step 4 — Document what you return
Briefly keep track of which coat was returned without a number, to whom and on what basis (description, ID). If a later guest claims the same number or coat, you have a logbook. This does not need to be complicated: date, number (if known), description and name will do.
Special case: two guests claim the same coat
Have both separately describe the coat and pocket contents; the real owner knows the details. If doubt remains, ask for identification and consult your logbook. In case of serious doubt, do not hand the coat over immediately; note both claims and resolve calmly afterwards.
Prevention is better than cure
- Use sturdy, clearly legible coat tickets; the paper numbers consist of two identical halves, one on the coat and one for the guest.
- Change colour per day or zone, so an old ticket is never accidentally counted.
- Hang up a ‘return your number’ sign visibly at exits and the desk.
- Hang coats in chronological order — a missing number then immediately stands out.
Is this part of a broader issue? Read our guide on cloakroom liability for the legal side.
Garderobe.nl Expertise Team
Garderobe.nl — market leader in the Benelux since 2008
This article is written by the Garderobe.nl team. Since 2008, we have helped more than 4,000 clients with the right cloakroom solution — from the local café to the Van Gogh Museum.
15+ years in the industry · 4,000+ clients assisted
Frequently Asked Questions
Didn't find what you were looking for? Call us or email info@garderobe.nl.
Can I return a coat without a number?
Yes, provided you are sure it is the correct owner. Ask for a description and the contents of the pockets, and if in doubt, ask for identification. Document what you return.
How do I prevent lost numbers?
Use sturdy, clearly legible coat tickets, change colour daily and put up a ‘return your number’ sign. Hanging coats in numerical order also helps: a missing number then immediately stands out.
What if two guests claim the same coat?
Have both independently describe the coat and pocket contents; the real owner knows the details. Request identification if necessary and consult your logbook.
Further reading
Other guides or a specific topic from the hub.