On the flip side of the OPs complaint, it's also frustrating when friends declare you're tipping too much. It bugs me because 1) It's my choice and none of your business and 2) Because some of my fellow meal-goers reduce their tip if they think I'm giving too much. We're not talking big, expensive checks either. We're talking a tip difference of one, maybe two bucks.
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"You should always tip at LEAST 15%"
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Originally posted by bainsidhe View PostOn the flip side of the OPs complaint, it's also frustrating when friends declare you're tipping too much. It bugs me because 1) It's my choice and none of your business and 2) Because some of my fellow meal-goers reduce their tip if they think I'm giving too much. We're not talking big, expensive checks either. We're talking a tip difference of one, maybe two bucks.
A lot of people nowadays tend to tip 20% as a rule, or at least I certainly do, unless the service is bad. If it's a small check (<$10) and the service was fine, sometimes I'll tip 25 or 30% if I have the money, or I'll do so on larger checks if the service was particularly excellent and the server particularly friendly.
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I'm with the "at least 20% unless service was terrible" crowd. I don't stiff if there was a kitchen screwup either, which was a pet peeve of mine when waiting tables. I would get stiffed a lot when the kitchen messed up an order, but the cooks could give a rat's ass because they didn't work for tips.
I like to say "I tip at least 20% because I worked in the industry." I feel like it gives me some kind of street cred
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Going by a mate of mine who used to be a waitress, minimum wage for waitstaff is £5 - £6, depending on how old you are and where you're working. Dunno if that applies to everywhere in the UK, but from what she says, tips are a bonus rather than making up half your pay."Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."
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Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View PostGoing by a mate of mine who used to be a waitress, minimum wage for waitstaff is £5 - £6, depending on how old you are and where you're working. Dunno if that applies to everywhere in the UK, but from what she says, tips are a bonus rather than making up half your pay.
Originally posted by Jaden View PostAs to our British friends, I have to assume tipping works differently there than in the states.Last edited by Zod; 09-28-2012, 08:33 PM.
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My view on tipping isn't really in line with everyone else here, not even Andara. I believe that 10% is suitable for passable service, 15% for good service, and possibly 20% or more for exemplary service or harsh conditions (pizza delivery in the rain, for example).
Part of this stems from the fact that for my entire life, I've lived in areas where there were no exemptions for minimum wage on tipped positions - in California and Nevada, the loopholes that corporations have to jump through to pay less than minimum wage are so onerous, nobody does it. So even the lowliest waitress or busboy gets minimum wage right off the bat, and tips are on top of that.
Note that I say this as having had a tipped job - I was a Blackjack Dealer in Vegas. I absolutely believe in making sure to tip when it's appropriate, and I'll throw extra on fora nice rackgood service.
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Originally posted by Nekojin View PostMy view on tipping isn't really in line with everyone else here, not even Andara. I believe that 10% is suitable for passable service, 15% for good service, and possibly 20% or more for exemplary service or harsh conditions (pizza delivery in the rain, for example).
Part of this stems from the fact that for my entire life, I've lived in areas where there were no exemptions for minimum wage on tipped positions - in California and Nevada, the loopholes that corporations have to jump through to pay less than minimum wage are so onerous, nobody does it. So even the lowliest waitress or busboy gets minimum wage right off the bat, and tips are on top of that.
Note that I say this as having had a tipped job - I was a Blackjack Dealer in Vegas. I absolutely believe in making sure to tip when it's appropriate, and I'll throw extra on fora nice rackgood service.
AND there are only a couple of states that require ANY service charge or delivery charge attached to a bill in a food type situation goes DIRECTLY to the employee NOT the company.I'm lost without a paddle and I'm headed up sh*t creek.
I got one foot on a banana peel and the other in the Twilight Zone.
The Fools - Life Sucks Then You Die
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