![]() |
Tipping tips?
How much tip do you leave at restaurants when you've have good service? Do you double the sales tax - less than 20% or do you double the entire check? I know some people who do not tip at all and that's their prerogative, I guess. What about valet parking? Do you tip the chambermaid? What about the doorman? OK, bellman? Lastly, the card dealer - how much do you tip him/her when you're done playing and are walking off with some winnings?
|
Will I get a tip for answering? :)
|
i just returned from oregon and they actually require someone to pump your gas at the station. i was wondering if i was to tip in that case too.
seems like all the guys pumping gas were recovering, or not meth users... |
Quote:
Just wondering if I'm living up to my reputation as a cheap ba5tard. I usually double the tax at restaurants, give $2 to the valet, I never tip the chambermaid or doorman. I give a $1 per bag to the bellman, unless the bag is really big or heavy then I give $2 per. As for the dealer, I don't play anymore but I've seen some people give extravagantly to those guys. |
I think a lot if it depends on region of the country and swankiness of the establishment.
Here's what I tip: Restaurants--right around 20% of the whole bill. Sometimes a bit less but rarely more except at diners where the waitresses are so used to getting stiffed that they really appreciate a tip instead of just expecting it. Bartenders--Never less than $1 per drink. More like 20-25% if it's a nice place and he/she's really using their skills. Valet Parking--usually $2. Chambermaid--$1 per night at motels, $2 a night at nice hotels. Doormen--nothing. The thought of tipping a guy to open a door bothers me. If he gets me a cab from the street (not the cab line) $2. Bellmen--$1 per bag, maybe more if they're strange sized stuff like skis. |
eff the card dealer, especially when you are leaving. if you are winning big and you plan on sitting there, kick in a few. goes towards "keep the good cards coming" karma. as far as hotel staff, i always ask the concierge or hotel clerk. they typically are pretty honest about stuff like that. at the food joints, i go 15%, which i calc from after tax amounts. i mentally calc 10%, divide that number by two, and add the two answers together. at a cheap restuarant, where you can get a rice plate for $3.50, i typically leave a dollar. leaving two quarters doesnt make sense to me. i have waited tables.
strippers, get a different tipping scale. and so do fishing guides. haha |
I would rather carry my own bags.
When it comes to eating / drinking, that all depends on how good the service was and how much the check is. If you stop at a bar for luch and get 2 beers and a sandwich and the bartender was really good. For a $15.00 tab i would just leave $20. But not if they were lacking. I once left a giel bartender a 100% tip, but she was reeeeaaaaaalllllllyyyyy nice and and it was really slow that day. |
The one thing I've never been able to figure out is tipping the Host(ess) or Maitre D' at a restaurant and actually getting something in return. The only times I've seen them get tipped, it was by big-pinkie-ring guys who were just showing off. If someone actually gets seated before me because they bribed the greeter, that's a restaurant I'm not going back to.
|
When I ment my wife she was waitressing for $2.25/hr so no tips meant no roof. Now I tip 15-20% for marginal service and 100% or more if they get me all drunk.
|
[QUOTE]Originally posted by RallyJon
one thing I've never been able to figure out is tipping the Host(ess) or Maitre D' at a restaurant In my experience, the wait staff tips out to the bar, bussers, host(ess), and sometimes the cook/maitre d.. |
20% at restaurants, wine excluded, if wine is under $100, a flat $15, over $100 then a flat $25. cabs 15%, hotels $25 if service is good.
valet $5, Bar servers 20% |
I hate to tip, its welfare for girls. Many of them have mutliple kids, mulitple dads, it's there own fault they took a job for 2 bucks an hour and I'm supposed to subsidize their lack of education?
They are very close to dancing around a pole in panties, screw them. I believe what Bushimi said in the beginning of Resovior Dogs. |
Quote:
|
Choke.... cough..cough...
Quote:
What would be the tip on that? Reply: The tip is... don't embarress yourself in public... Oh, ok... Thanks... And why do I keep talking to myself?? I don't know. |
Quote:
|
Mike, I went to Sebring one year (in my youth) with a bucket of The Colonel's finest chicken & a case Pagan Pink Ripple. After that experience, I try to avoid the bargan stuff. meaning any wine that retails for less than $1.97 p.s. Pagan Pink has lumps upon exit in either direction. Craig
|
Ooops, wrong thread. I thought this had something to do with cows....
|
I heard a good one...if you ever get terrible restaurant service? Leave 2 pennies as a tip. One heads, the other tails...the message is: "Get your head out of your...."
|
Quote:
|
I minimum tip 20% of the total bill, unless they're horrid or something. I tip 15% for mediocre service.
I waitressed through college, so I'm understanding and realize it's a hard job. |
dollar per drink even coke and water, double the tax or 20% depending on mental math skills that day. Always tip well - get treated like a King at my regular establishments.
However be a jerk and get nothing.. |
Cantdrv55
I noticed that your at your 910 post, think carefully what you want to say on your "911th" post. Unless of course you drive a water pumper |
We usually give about 15% tip in restaurants. My grandmother leaves a very small tip (5%, she still lives in Poland though), and my aunt gives a large tip, more like 40-50%. My mom would like to tip as much as my aunt. I keep my father's habbits and try to tip 15-20% at restaurat. I have no clue on gambling or paying for a bar drink since I am not at the legal age yet.
Matt |
Quote:
Can't judge it until you walked in their shoes. And mind you thos eshoes get plenty greasy. I tip 30 to 35% (and have been known to tip a five spot even before they take a drink order - you would be amazed what that does for your service! |
Quote:
|
At the very least 20% for good service...........and more if exceptional.
10-15 % for mediocre. In a number of establishments the waitress/er must tip out % of her tips to the kitchen/bar/hostess etc........ If you can't afford to tip ........... there is always a drive-thru for you. :) |
I'm a former chef, server, bartender, manager and maitre'd. I tip a lot! What LubeMaster said is true, bigger tips means better service 99% of the time. Once I took the wife out for our anniversary to a very nice restaurant. When the server came around I laid $100 in his hands and told him my needs. We did not want to be interupted, we wanted to take our time, keep our ashstray empty and our drinks full, I'll have the best steak in the house and make it rare, my wife will have whatever the chef recommends. We want appetizers, you choose, same with desert. I'd like an expresso and the wife a latte with desert. We don't want wine so don't even bother. The server who was already at the top of his game instructed his bus staff of our needs and we had a dinner that was absolutely fabulous, the maitre'd didn't seat any loud tables near us, the drinks where great even thought I wasn't having any alcohol, I could tell the bartender had just freshly cut the lime for my tonic, the salad freshly torn, everything to perfection. At the end of the night our bill was close to $200.00, I gave the waiter $300.00 and told him to keep the change, tipped the busboy $20, the bartender $40 and the maitre'd $40 and told him I'd be back. He smiled and told me he'd be happy to take care of me. I think I even sent money back to the kitchen!
I'm sure I have you all wondering why I would tip so ridiculously. The fact is I can make any meal they had on the menu, bake just about any over the deserts, and I might great drinks. I can do all of this at home but what I can't get is a nice romantic dinner with my wife with transparent service. That night we were treated like royalty and it made our anniversary very special. This year we were out of town and didn't get back to the restaurant but we definately plan to go next year. I wish we could afford to do it every week. ;) My rule of thumb for tipping is simple, if you think you should tip, then tip. 20 percent is the minimum unless the service is very poor. I even tip at gas station drivethru's and a little extra if it's winter. I picked up a pack of smokes for a co-worker today at the drivethre while I was at lunch. When I gave him his change he asked me where the rest was and I told him it was a tip for the attendant. He told me that was crazy, I told him to walk to his car in the rain and get them himself next time. I go to a hairdresser rather than a barber, I don't tell her how to cut my hair, she cuts it in a way that she thinks will look good on me, she get's $15-20 everytime. Sometimes in life it's worth it to spend a little extra and be pampered, especially if your job/life is stressful. I might be crazy but I'm also happy and satisfied. |
It's interesting that mostly only the bigger tippers have replied.
If everyone tipped like that there would be a lot more 19 year old waitresses' with no education, owning Rolexes, 997s and major coke habits. There are some that make serious money on tips but not the majority. I do tip, not usually excessively. I object to the practice of tipping someone for opening a door for me or hotels where some monkey will physically wrestle your briefcase out of your hand, drag it and you with it to your room and expect a tip. Typically they are never around when you arrive with a lot of bulky packages and you would welcome (and tip) their assistance. Tipping for bad or mediocre service? No chance. After one awful meal where the highlight was the starter arriving after the dessert, with all the orders wrong etc etc we were followed into the street by the surly waiter wanting to know where the tip was: Asking three burly guys a question like that after the most abbysmal overpriced restaurant meal I can remember was not clever. |
Quote:
As for me, I am currently PUTTING MYSELF THROUGH GRAD SCHOOL by waiting on tables in the affluent Farmington Valley area of CT. Granted, I get a (comparatively) cushy $5 per hour, but it's the tips I need to survive. I have to pay all my bills (insurance, utilities, tuition, two student loans... plus the extras like credit card and phone) from what I earn in tips AND go to school full-time. Bad week = all payments get sent out late. Luckily, I manage to make pretty decent money out of this... but it can get scary if you have a rash of bad tippers in a row. Oh, and by the way... if you really don't ever leave tips, I would recommend that you NEVER go back to that restaurant again. They DO remember the non-tippers, and they will get revenge. |
Quote:
|
I tip 15-20% in resturants - more if it is warranted or if it is a place I frequent and the staff treats me as a regular.
What gets me is when I walk into a lunch establisment or a coffee place and they have a "tip jar" for taking my order, making it and handing it to me. That isn't the service I tip for - sorry. And as far as people saying "it's the only job I could get." Well - I'm calling shenanagins on that crap. I was a starving college student myself at one time and it was the only job I couldn't get. I worked at Denny's for some time and realized that I was a moron to stay there any longer than it took to find something else. I worked at plenty of other places that paid full wages and worked with my schedule for school happily as well as having SOME benefits at least. I worked at Blockbuster for a while and I worked - god help me- at jiffy lube for years. I also worked at a few hobby stores and music stores. The fact is - if you think that's your only game in time (what ever job it is) you're selling yourself short because ANYONE can do better than what they are doing right now. I have a very good job - but I know I can do better - this one is just good enough though. Seriously - get a grip. Another detail is that my sister - a cute little grad student herself has tried and tried to get a waitress job here in LA and failed miserably. The hours would be good for her schedule but they want people with experience and she just doesn't have it. If the service I get is lame - I leave a lame tip. |
Quote:
|
I don't buy into these high tipping arguments to get good service. My wife and I eat out often at moderate priced restaurants. We'll spend $80 to $100 between two of us per meal. We are always courteous (this carries a lot of weight) and we tip 20% for good service. We have always been greeted with a smile and receive great service when we return. If we are treated poorly we tip accordingly and we don't return. I only tip for service, not for show.
|
A tip is earned. A tip can also be lost.
In restraunts I tip 15-20% for very good service. If good service then just hte standard 15%. If the service gets worse the % goes down. if it is terrible I would not tip anything, which has only happened maybe once. If the service was so bad I didn't leave a tip I simply wouldn't go back again. What gets me is when the place imposses a 20% tip on parties of 8 or more. I guess it is no longer a tip but a mandatory price increase. The tip to the waitress never includes the price of the alcohol served with a meal. |
I tip depending on what level of service I receive. I do tip well for good service with bartenders, wait-staff, etc. If I stay at a nice hotel I don't tip everyone even though I think all that come in contact expect something.
Could care less about who they are or why they have that service job. That's their business. I'm in that establishment to drink, eat, or sleep. If the service is bad I tip accordingly. |
Quote:
Why not tip your mechanic on your porsche, he actually did something more than walk a pepsi over to ya. Alot of people don't tip the pizza driver, and they drove the pizza to your house. But still expect a tip, when a delivery charge was already added in. Ever tip the person at Subway, they actually made your food right in front of you? Alot more work then walking a pepsi 20 foot. These people need to get a real job and quit expecting hungry people to put 150 bucks in there pocket every night. They are some of the biggest tax evaders around. They claim they only make 50 a night, when they make alot more. These people making close to stripper pay and not showing a booby. Alot of cash for 50 seconds worth of work. People only tip because they are socialogically tricked into this. They don't want a guilt trip of not tipping and looking cheap so they do it. About the only one worth tipping is the guy at the drive up liquor store. If I tip them, they are suprised and I say "here take the cash, F the slutty waitresses you walked over a bottle of Jack, and deserve alot more than a stupid 20 year kids walking pepsis who flunked out of high school." |
red UFO 928:
I agree to some extent, and it is a shame that the tip concept has evolved the way it has. Welfare is money for nothing - servers do work, albeit some don't seem to. The next time you buy a bed, sofa, car, TV or dishwasher that sales man is making a tip off you, thing is, it's buried in the price of the product. With resterants, it is not. The commission or tip as it where is left up to the patron. You tip your guitar dealer everytime you buy some strings, a pic, a new mic or a sound board. Maybe he/she deserves it, but then again, everyone deserves a $ for a # of effort. Sitting around collecting money should be left to the lottery winnings and smart investers of the world only. |
Yeah, it would be better if the government would just tax everybody more, and redistribute that money equitably among waitresses regardless of their skill or service.
(R) don't believe in welfare, they believe in hard work and rewards commensurate with that hard work. (yeah, yeah, skip the corporate welfare comeback--we know) There's something incredibly pure about the economic relationship between a waiter and a customer. I think this country would be a better place if more workers had such immediate feedback on the quality of their work. How great would it be if I called a tech support line and could dock the idiot $10 every time he knows less about my computer than I do? What if the lazy cashier at the supermarket checkout had a meter that showed her wages increasing or decreasing based on the level of irritation of the line of people waiting for her "price check"? What if the dealership mechanic had his pay reduced every time he misdiagnosed a simple problem? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
A waiter staff engineer presents you a menu - answers simple questions (does this or that have onions in it?), Takes your drink order and then walks away for a few minutes. They take your order and then someone - not necessarily them delivers it to you. Then at the moment when your mouth is full they ask you a question on the quality (which in my opinion is the rudest part of the whole thing - asking someone purposefully a question when it would be rude for that person to respond to you) of the delivery. I've done both - I don't think being a waiter is something I would ever want to depend on for a living. I saw this when I was one and worked myself into something better. That's what smart people do - they recognize the problems in their life and then change them. I tip my mechanic with a token of appreiciation as well. |
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:15 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website