Skip to content
JRM Hotels
Skip to main content

Families & Accessibility

What does religious hospitality look like at a Jerusalem hotel for a frum family?

Religious hospitality in Jerusalem means the details of frum life are built into the hotel rather than requested as favors: a hechsher matched to your rav's standard, a Shabbos elevator inside the city eruv, minyanim in the building — with daily Daf Yomi shiurim at Haneviim Boutique and Prima Palace — mikvaos on-site or coordinated, and seudos reserved before Shabbos. The four hotels JRM books are built this way — and JRM itself is a Brooklyn-based frum family that coordinates the entire trip in English around your family's standards.

In practice it looks like this across the four hotels we book: every one has a shul in the building — Jerusalem Gate's comes with its own Sefer Torah, both Ashkenaz and Sefard siddurim, and a Beit Midrash; Haneviim Boutique keeps a rabbi on premises full time with a library of seforim; Prima Palace runs a daily Daf Yomi shiur from 7:00 to 7:45 AM and puts netilas-yadayim basins in most guest rooms; Yirmiyahu 33 pairs its shul and kiddush hall with a Mashgiach Temidi in the kitchen. Mikvaos follow the same pattern: on-site for both men and women at Haneviim, a men's mikveh at Prima Palace, and a free men's mikveh for guests at Jerusalem Gate.

The second half of religious hospitality is the matching. Hechsher expectations differ by rav and kehillah, so we place you at the hotel whose standard matches the one your home kitchen keeps — and for groups of 25 or more rooms at Jerusalem Gate, Rav Landau or Eida HaChareidis supervision can be arranged on top of the house certificate. Before you arrive, the pre-arrival brief covers the Shabbos elevator schedule, the current eruv status, and minyan and shiur times — so the frum logistics are settled before the trip starts, in English, by a Brooklyn-based frum family that plans around your family's standards.

Not sure which fits your family?

We answer this for your exact trip — free.

Tell us your dates, your family’s kashrus standard, and what matters most. We confirm the specifics — kashrus, Shabbos timing, walking distances — and recommend the right hotel for your trip, not a generic one.

Last verified 2026-07-05. Hotel details — kashrus, mikveh, elevator schedules, room configurations — are confirmed for your specific dates before any booking.

Call Plan a trip