This essay begins to investigate the possibility of a Heideggerian sense of hospitality. By drawing out the concern for home at the center of Heidegger’s analysis of uncanniness and attending carefully to its ethical resonances, I believe we find an opening to just such a possibility. Heidegger’s thinking of uncanniness, of an essential uncanniness that defines human-being as both unhomely and becoming homely, opens us to an ethicality understood in terms of home, an authentic being-with that finds its origin in the uncanny opening of human-being to Being, and thus, to beings.