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So theoretically kogman and keisie may not ask for ID for a large group

Checked on November 15, 2025
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Executive summary

You asked whether “theoretically Kogman and Keisie may not ask for ID for a large group.” Available listings and marketing pages describe Kogman & Keisie as a guest farm and events-capable venue with facilities for up to ~56 people and parking for ~40 cars [1], but none of the provided sources say anything about their ID or guest‑check policies or legal obligations to ask for identification [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [1]. Therefore the specific claim about ID checks at Kogman & Keisie is not supported in the current reporting [2] [1].

1. What the sources do say about Kogman & Keisie’s capacity and event hosting

Public listings consistently present Kogman & Keisie as a working organic guest farm in Montagu offering guesthouse rooms, cottages and event facilities; one listing explicitly states they can host an event for up to 56 people and park up to 40 cars, and that a marquee can be erected for larger events [1]. Other tourism and booking pages describe accommodation options, breakfasts, and typical guest‑house services [2] [3] [4] [5] [6], supporting the idea that the property is used for both short‑stay lodging and gatherings.

2. What the sources do not say: ID checks and guest verification

None of the provided sources mention whether Kogman & Keisie require ID for individual guests or for groups, nor do they quote a policy about asking ID at entry to events or for large groups [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [1]. Because the reporting is silent on that operational detail, any statement that they “may not ask for ID for a large group” is not supported by the current materials — available sources do not mention their ID‑checking practice [2] [1].

3. Legal and industry context you won’t find here

Operational decisions about asking IDs at hotels, guest farms, or event venues often depend on national/regional law, the venue’s internal policy, insurer requirements, and safety or licensing obligations; those broader legal or regulatory frameworks are not covered in the provided documents (available sources do not mention legal or regulatory ID requirements for Kogman & Keisie). For example, the materials we have focus on amenities and capacity rather than compliance or guest‑screening rules [2] [3] [1].

4. Plausible reasons a venue might or might not check ID

Based on common industry practice (not directly documented here), a venue might require IDs for formal check‑in of overnight guests, for verifying bookings, or to meet liquor or safety‑licensing rules; conversely, a venue hosting a private daytime event on private property may rely on the event organiser for guest lists and not perform individual checks. However, these possible rationales are not referenced in the provided pages about Kogman & Keisie, so they remain hypothetical relative to the sources at hand (available sources do not mention reasons for ID checks at this property) [2] [1].

5. What you can do to confirm their policy

Because the public listings and marketing pages omit ID policy, the straightforward way to resolve this is to contact Kogman & Keisie directly or check the booking terms on the platform you intend to use; the property’s contact details and address are published on local tourism pages [7] and some booking platforms note check‑in instructions like advising hosts of arrival time [5]. The cited pages include the farm’s address/GPS and reservation notes, which you can use to reach them for a definitive policy answer [7] [5].

6. Takeaway for readers and potential organisers

The evidence shows Kogman & Keisie positions itself as both accommodation and an event venue with capacity for dozens of guests [1], but the available materials are silent on whether the farm enforces ID checks for large groups [2] [3] [1]. If ID policy matters for liability, safety, or guest‑management reasons, do not rely on theory: ask the venue in writing and request their terms for events and check‑in procedures before confirming bookings [5] [7].

Want to dive deeper?
What legal ID requirements apply to businesses refusing or accepting large groups without identification?
Could not asking for ID for a large group increase liability for Kogman and Keisie?
How do local ordinances regulate age or ID checks for entrance to venues or events?
What best practices should businesses use when handling large groups to prevent fraud or safety issues?
Are there insurance implications or compliance risks if staff skip ID checks for groups?