Adele steals hotel toiletries to give to guests at her £48M mansion

Thrifty Adele (who’s worth £165M) reveals she steals hotel toiletries to give to guests at her £48M mansion

She has a net worth of £165 million. 

Yet Adele revealed she still looks after the pennies as she steals toiletries from hotels to stock her bathroom cabinet. 

The singer, 35, lives in a £48m Beverly Hills mansion with her husband Rich Paul and often has guests round to stay. 

And when friends stay at her home they’re treated to personalised goodies and toiletries. 

Adele discovered her new passion for making gifts for her guests earlier this year and has even created a personalised logo for the goodies to give the feel of being in a high end hotel.

Thrifty Adele (who’s worth £165M) has revealed she steals hotel toiletries to give to guests at her £48M mansion (pictured in 2022) 

Adele revealed that her autumn hobby was ‘collecting individually wrapped hotel amenities, but for my house.

She said: ‘So it’s like individually wrapped toothbrushes, shave foam, you have never heard of brands and all biodegradable packaging, by the way – these are things that you like when you go to a hotel.

‘Basically, I’ve got some guests coming to stay with me soon and I want to go all out, obviously I’m only on Amazon, so I’m limited to the level of how great it is

‘And then I worry that everyone’s going to take everything with them where it’s more like in a hotel, I’m going to ask you in a hotel it’s like, oh bloody, I’ve got earbuds Q-tips, a nail file and you look into what they have and it’s very useful. I don’t ever take them with me. And if I’m in a very posh hotel, then I take everything.

‘I want to know what guest etiquette is right. I would never take something from somebody’s house, even if it was there for their usage.

‘If you went to stay at one of your friend’s houses, not a hotel, not a stranger, and bear in mind, you’re staying there for free, you shouldn’t be expecting no gifts.

‘I’m missing a very important thing out. I’m doing my own personal logo on it, not the Adele logo. I came up with one for my house. So it has that. ‘

Sharing her Christmas plans on stage at her final Vegas show before her winter break, Adele then asked the fans their thoughts: ‘Would you take them with you? Even if they were Amazon stock? Am I being a tight host?

The singer, 35, has spent the last three months creating personalised goodies and toiletries in the rooms of her sprawling home in Hidden Hills, Los Angeles 

The star boasted that she is ‘wonderful company’ and a ‘wonderful host’ for her and husband Rich Paul ‘s friends and family

As her audience yelped in approval, she reacted: ‘They said that’s ridiculous. Okay. Okay. Good to know. Wow, I never considered myself tight.

‘I need to talk to my therapist about that. ‘

The six-bedroom home has a two bed guest house.

Adele divulged her hobby to fans during her sold out run at Caesars Palace, where she will return to on Friday, January 19, 2024.

Some of her rich LA pals urged her to upgrade the options in the room.

‘They were saying, you should get a record player in the bedroom. I’m like, what? That is a bit overboard.’

Adele has an incredible property portfolio including three adjacent Beverly Hills homes, worth over £20m.

She resides in the £50m private Hidden Hills Mediterranean-style estate, which was formerly owned by Sylvester Stallone.

Last week she reflected on her more humble beginnings, being raised by a single mother Penny in small flats across London

Last week Adele confessed her ‘cutthroat, terrifying and tough’ character from that upbringing rather than her talent has been the key factor in her astonishing success.

Adele discovered her new passion for making gifts for her family and pals staying over at her £48m Beverly Hills mansion earlier this year

Adele boasted of how sticking with her principles, instilled in her from growing up in a single parent household, was vital for her career.

In an emotional series of admissions the Oscar winner described herself as the ‘boss at home and boss at work’, forged by a ‘roughness and toughness’ from her Tottenham, north London upbringing.

Adele used collecting the Sherry Lansing Leadership Award at the annual Women in Entertainment gala in LA to admit her journey is ‘as much to do with character as talent’.

The hitmaker said of her award: ‘I cannot help but think it’s as much to do with my character as my talent.

‘Talent can’t dictate how you move. Talent can’t decide how you treat people.

‘It doesn’t have a moral compass. Talent cannot read a room. You can be the most talented person on the planet and only make bad decisions. And to be honest, talent is kind of random. It is like you might have it, but what does it mean?

‘But character, well, character is observed, it’s witnessed, character is taught and it’s passed down. My character, as I’m sure you can tell this from the last minute I’ve been on stage, has a roughness and a toughness to it.

‘I trust no one, and yet I’m completely fearless. And I hundred percent got it from the women who raised me.

The megastar has even created a personalised logo for the goodies to give the feel of being in a high end hotel

‘As a child, you’re a sponge. You learn what you’re shown. My mother, my aunties, my grandmothers, they were all strong, loud, boisterous, loyal and cutthroat women like me,

‘Just jumped for you kind of women, chaotic, but focused, soft in the middle, but solid on the outside. Like me. They’re a force to be reckoned with and quite frankly, terrifying at times – like me.

‘Because that was because they had to learn the hard way what it is to be a woman. And so in turn, they hardened. Their character was their armor. But thanks to them, my character is my skin.

‘As a child, you’re a sponge. You learn what you’re shown. My school teachers, my God, I had some of the most amazing teachers who gave me my love of literature, of words, of poems and rhymes, stories and writing.

‘They were far too qualified to be teaching at a school like mine. I could easily have made double the money at private schools, but they stayed with us to give us a chance. 

‘And that taught me loyalty. These are my leaders and I’m eternally grateful to them all for making me who I am today.’

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