From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishguesthouseguest‧house /ˈɡesthaʊs/ noun [countable] DLTTBBa private house where people can pay to stay and have meals► see thesaurus at hotel
Examples from the Corpus
guesthouse• The body of Mrs Campbell, 46, of Swindon, Wilts, was found in a suitcase in a guesthouse.• Isaac took him to Rosehill Plantation, a hotel and guesthouse where Mitchell checked in until he found quarters of his own.• The hotels and guesthouses still treat their visitors like royalty.• Covering motels, private hotels, guesthouses, inns, bed & breakfast, farmhouses.• Simply by sitting there, he rendered the dining-room as cold and cheerless as a room in a commercial traveller's guesthouse.• My lady and her women are lodged in the guesthouse, you need have no fears in joining their company.