Roomer

Motel 6 Conyers: the no-nonsense pit stop you actually need

When you need a cheap, clean crash pad east of Atlanta, this is the move.

5 min read

โ€œYou're driving through Georgia, it's late, you need a bed that won't make you regret your choices โ€” and you need it for under sixty bucks.โ€

If you're passing through Conyers โ€” maybe you're headed to a wedding at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit, maybe you're doing the drive from Atlanta to Augusta and your eyelids are getting heavy, maybe you just need to sleep somewhere that isn't your car โ€” the Motel 6 on Dogwood Drive is the kind of place that does exactly one thing and does it without drama. It's not trying to impress you. It's trying to give you a room, a bed, and a door that locks. And honestly? For the price, that's all you should be asking for.

Conyers sits about 25 miles east of downtown Atlanta, right off I-20, which makes this particular Motel 6 genuinely useful as a staging point. You're close enough to Atlanta that you could drive in for a Hawks game or a concert at State Farm Arena without paying Atlanta hotel prices, and you're close enough to the eastern Georgia countryside that an early morning start toward Madison or Athens is painless. It's a logistics hotel. You pick it because it's in the right place at the right price, not because it's going to end up on your Instagram.

At a Glance

  • Price: $60-85
  • Best for: You are traveling with big dogs and don't want to pay pet fees
  • Book it if: You are on a strict budget, traveling with a pet, and just need a cheap place to crash right off I-20.
  • Skip it if: You are squeamish about bugs or mold
  • Good to know: They charge a $3.00 nightly utility fee not included in the base rate
  • Roomer Tip: Check your room thoroughly for bugsโ€”especially in the fridge and bathroomโ€”before bringing your luggage inside.

What you're actually getting

The rooms here are surprisingly spacious โ€” that's the thing that catches you off guard. You walk in expecting the standard budget motel squeeze, and instead you get enough floor space to actually open a suitcase without performing gymnastics around the bed. The layout is straightforward: a queen or two doubles, a TV mounted on the wall, a small desk area that's functional enough for charging your phone and laptop simultaneously, and a bathroom that's compact but clean. The beds are the updated Motel 6 style โ€” firmer than you'd expect, with white linens that at least look like they've been through an industrial wash cycle this century.

The shower situation is basic but gets the job done โ€” decent water pressure, no surprises. You're not going to linger in there, but you'll come out feeling like a functional human, which is really the bar we're clearing here. There's free Wi-Fi, and it actually works well enough to stream something on your phone before you pass out, though don't expect to run a Zoom call from your room without some buffering.

Now for the honest part: this is a Motel 6 off an interstate exit in Georgia. The walls are not thick. You will hear doors closing. If someone in the next room is watching TV at full volume at midnight, you're going to know about it. Pack earbuds or download a white noise app โ€” this is non-negotiable advice. Also, the exterior corridors mean you're walking outside to get to your room, which is fine in May and less fine in a January rainstorm. Park close to your door.

โ€œIt's a logistics hotel โ€” you pick it because it's in the right place at the right price, not because it's going to end up on your Instagram.โ€

The one detail that stuck out: the parking lot is well-lit and genuinely roomy. That sounds like nothing, but if you've ever tried to park a truck or an SUV loaded with luggage at a budget motel and ended up wedged between a dumpster and a concrete barrier, you know this matters. You can pull in, grab your bag, and be in your room in under two minutes from the moment you turn off the engine. That efficiency is the whole pitch.

There's no restaurant on-site and no breakfast situation, but you're right off the highway, so a Waffle House is practically within throwing distance โ€” and let's be real, a Waffle House at 7am is better than any continental breakfast a budget motel could offer you. There's also a Chick-fil-A and a few local spots along Highway 138 if you want something with a little more substance before you hit the road. Coffee-wise, grab it on the way out. Don't overthink it.

The plan

You don't need to book far ahead โ€” this isn't selling out โ€” but checking online rates the day before usually beats walk-in pricing. Request a room on the end of a building if you can, away from the stairwell, to minimize hallway noise. Bring your own pillow if you're particular about that sort of thing. Skip any add-ons at check-in. Walk across the parking lot to the nearest fast food for dinner, set an alarm, sleep hard, and leave early. That's the entire play.

Rooms start around $50 a night depending on the season, which means your entire overnight โ€” room, Waffle House dinner, gas station coffee โ€” comes in under $70. For a clean bed and a smart location off I-20, that math works every time.

Book an end room, bring earbuds, hit the Waffle House next door for dinner and breakfast, and get back on I-20 feeling like you spent almost nothing โ€” because you did.