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    Are You Tipping Correctly?

    While most of us agree that 20 percent (or close to it) is the standard amount to leave on a restaurant check, other tipping-related matters leave us scratching our heads. To settle these debates once and for all, Steve Dublanica, former server and author of the blog Waiter Rant and recent book Keep the Change: A Clueless Tipper's Quest to Become the Guru of the Gratuity, weighs in on some hot-button issues.

    1. SHOULD YOU TIP ON THE TAX?

    On one hand: There's no reason to tip on the tax. The restaurant doesn't get to keep tax money. When gratuity is automatically included on a check for a large party, it's added pretax.

    On the other: When most servers total their sales at the end of the night, they include the tax in the amount. This "cash-out" amount determines how much they tip out to busboys, runners, and other staff members. By not tipping on tax, you're stiffing them out of their fair share.

    Steve's verdict: "I like it when you do, but you don't have to tip on the tax."

    2. WHAT IS THE CORRECT AMOUNT TO TIP ON DRINKS?

    On one hand: Twenty percent is way too much - it's just a drink! The standard in most bars is $1 for each beverage or 10 percent, which generally adds up to $1. Bartenders are tipped out by other members of the staff, so they are walking away with plenty of money.

    On the other: Bartenders do more work than servers because they're the ones actually making the drinks, not the server. They deserve the full 20 percent.

    Steve's verdict: "[At the bar] you should leave 15 to 20 percent of the total cost of that drink, which may seem kind of ridiculous. But think of it this way: At the table, you're paying 15 to 20 percent. Why does the bartender not get that money, but the waiter - who doesn't make those drinks - does?"

    3. DO YOU ALWAYS TIP YOUR BARISTA?

    On one hand: Yes. They're skilled workers and deserve tips just as much as other food-service employees.

    On the other: Baristas make a decent hourly wage, unlike servers, and they don't work for tips. Besides, what's the point of tipping them if they don't see you put the money in the jar?

    Steve's verdict: "I learned when I worked as a barista that if you get a cup of coffee and give us the change from buying that cup, we're really grateful. But I've seen people order one of these frothy iced milk latte-type chemistry experiments - which can be more complicated to prepare than a martini - and then not tip. For baristas who make you one of these, tip a dollar."

    See also: 13 Things Your Barista Won't Tell You

    4. WHEN, IF EVER, IS IT ACCEPTABLE TO LEAVE A BAD TIP?

    On one hand: Never. Even if your server really, really screws up, the tip money is being distributed to multiple employees of the restaurant. If you're unhappy with your server, it's not fair to penalize the busboy, bartender, food runners, and other employees who depend on this money to make their living.

    On the other: It's OK to leave a bad tip if you receive bad service. It's your right as a customer, and it will send a message of displeasure to the restaurant.

    Steve's verdict: "I don't suggest stiffing servers on the tip, because you are punishing all the other people connected to that food chain. I tell people to talk to the manager and say, 'I had very poor service, but I'm leaving a tip anyway.'"

    See also: 20 Secrets Your Waiter Won't Tell You

    5. SHOULD A SERVER BE ABLE TO AUTOMATICALLY INCLUDE GRATUITY IF IT'S NOT A LARGE GROUP?

    On one hand: Yes, in certain cases. Many tourists from other countries don't understand the tipping protocol in the United States. Servers have a right to protect themselves.

    On the other: It's outrageous for a server to include the tip unless it's a large group. Legally, servers don't have the right to make the customer pay any gratuity.

    Steve's verdict: "If you were to include a service charge automatically, you would have to tell everyone who walks in that you're adding a 20 percent service charge. I don't support waiters deciding who they're going to attach a tip to. That's not their job - that's management's job - and they need to have a very well thought-out policy about why they're doing that."

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    • cathryn  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 months ago
      Always tip 20%. Server's hourly pay is pretty much all taken out in taxes, leaving us to only live off our tips. If you get bad service, say something to the manager...the embarrassment is punishing enough, and usually they will compensate you.

      I believe, unless you have worked in a tipped position, your opinion means NOTHING. Always tip 20%, ALWAYS!
    • S X  •  3 months ago
      Do Baristas tip when they eat out at fast food restaurants??? Those kids work really hard and move pretty darn fast to get the food up. Tip for coffee- what a joke.
    • vettechef  •  3 months ago
      Simply put..charge more for the food and pay the people a decent wage like the rest of us make.
      • 528blondie 3 months ago
        I agree
      • nonyourbusiness 3 months ago
        you've missed the point guys! they should get min wage anyway! it's federal law ...if wages+tips do not equal min wage, then the employer MUST make up the differance

        A link to the Dept of Labor........labor laws

        http://www.dol.gov/elaws/faq/esa/flsa/002.htm
      • vettechef 3 months ago
        No you missed the point Nonyourbusiness..I have been in the business 25 years..Forget the tip raise the prices and pay waitstaff like you do your cooks..anytime a waitperson can make 15-20 an hour where a cook makes 8-10 an hour..In california they make around 8.25 an hour plus tips.Don't be a waitperson if you can't handle a person having the right to tip whatever one pleases...You can't dictate what "I MUST LEAVE" The word tip means To Insure Proper Service! I shouldn't have to pay to have my food delivered and drinks served to me!
    • DabbleD  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 months ago
      These tip articles always read the same, here is a summary , "TIP a lot all the time".
      To Insure Promptness, has not worked out all that well for me, it's been a lie. The best way to handle this nonsense is to eat at home, far better & for a lot less. If I made $200 an hour after expenses, I might feel differently. It's up to you, not some self appointed un-deserving compensation seeking "Guru".
    • Carol  •  McMinnville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
      Do you tip a owner of a place that fixes you a meal and he a lone serves it.
    • T  •  Salem, Oregon  •  3 months ago
      20% as STANDARD? What #$%$ What has this guy been smoking?
      • Dawn 3 months ago
        20% has been the standard for years now among civilized people. Were your parents the extras in Deliverance (the movie, idiot)
      • David 3 months ago
        Go Dawn!!
      • None of 3 months ago
        The term idiot is best reserved for you...
        Nobody deserves to make $20+/hr for food service when the average worker make less.
    • Stepheny  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  3 months ago
      I usually tip 20%, however, when I receive terrible service, I tip nothing. I don't care if it's considered "punishing all the other people connected to that food chain." The server is the representative of the restaurant and if he/she treats me badly, then to me that is poor representation of the restaurant. I also don't agree with tip sharing. I think if a server serves you well, then the tip should be for that server ONLY. The hostess or bus people had nothing to do with your service. As far as the bartenders, they make so much more than the servers and it's unfair for the servers to have to tip them.
      • Samantha 27 days ago
        The idea that not tipping punishes everyone in the restaurant that evening is not entirely accurate. If the policy of the restaurant is for the server to tip out on their total tips then that is true. However, most places (not all) require the server to tip out on sales. Thus by not tipping the server when this is the case you are making the server pay for your visit. It is never just the server that serves you or makes your visit to the restaurant the experience that it is. There is the bus boy or server assistant that sets your table, clears your plates, fills your water glasses and brings you bread, there is the food runner that brings the food to your table, the bartender that makes your fancy cocktails. (I've only worked one place where the servers make their own cocktails) I could go on and on, there is no one person solely responsible for making sure that your one table goes smoothly never mind the fifty others that are going on at the same time. Tips make the restaurant world go round and there are many cogs in the machine that need oiling.
    • next  •  3 months ago
      When the 20% tip becomes the norm more people will switch to fast food or buffets.
    • concerned  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  3 months ago
      Go to maine ,they wan't to know what the tip is
      before they serve you.
    • Ehal  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  3 months ago
      I will absolutely give a good tip when I get good service. The problem is that very very few restaurants know what good service is and it is often not taught well.. The higher the prices at the restaurant the higher my expectation of service. I used to work at these types of jobs and made good tips at 10%, 20% is absurd though I will pay more than that if given outstanding service. The trouble is that most restaurants should have a sign at the door reading "Lousy Service" and they ought to be glad for any tip at all. I normally give 10-15% for lousy service I may give 5% unless they are blatant and they get none. I have though given tips bigger than the bill a number of times for outstanding service. It really makes my day when I get incredible service and I go out of my way to let management know as well. It happened on Long Island at On The Border Mexican restaurant by the Ikea at exit 42 near Holtville and at a truckstop on Highway 80 in Pennsylvania, and at Astoria, NewYork in an out of the way Italian Restaurant name Just Authur's at DitMars and 39th, and at a Texas Road House at Steel's Corner North of Akron Ohio. They are so few and far between that I remember them.

      With that said I think that it is a travesty that people are made to work for starvation wages in the food service industry because tips are not a requirement and many establishments simply to not attract the customers who will provide the workers with sufficient income above there wages to even meet the minimum wage. This tipping practice is simply a way to avoid having to pay minimum wage at many establishments.
    • fred  •  Lincoln, United Kingdom  •  3 months ago
      Tipping is not a requirement , if a customer is so inclined the tip reflects the service , 15% is a good tip , I am sick and fed up of reading idiots who write these articles promoting 20%.
      • nonyourbusiness 3 months ago
        TY Fred
      • Football Folly 3 months ago
        stay home
      • Dawn 3 months ago
        Yes, the tip reflects the service, and average service should get an average tip, which is 20%. If you can't afford to tip, you can't afford to have someone bring you 14 glasses of tea, cheapskate.
    • GregM  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
      First of all, I am absolutely NOT going to tip based on the total with sales tax, as you didn't SERVE me the sales tax. So forget it. Second of all, I don't see how it takes any more or less effort to deliver an $8 burger to my table than it does a $20 steak, but you think that my tip should only be based on the food total? OK, so be it. I will choose the least expensive item on the menu and order water. Or better yet, I just stay at home and let you figure out how you're going to pay your rent as the restaurant industry continues to see declining profits, how about that? Since I don't have to worry about tipping the cashier at the grocery store. Or, maybe, do a great job and I will tip you accordingly on how well you DO YOUR JOB.
    • concerned  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  3 months ago
      Tipping is a load of crap, you can tell when they are
      working on the tip or working on you.
    • budroses  •  Blackwood, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
      If restaurant owners where made to pay a decent wage, tipping would not be nessasary, but they pay diddly sqats!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Why should the public be liable for their salary???????????
    • nonyourbusiness  •  3 months ago
      Entitlement mentality.
    • resolve well  •  Aledo, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      never stiff a witch
    • coniglio  •  3 months ago
      I tip what I can afford.,
    • next  •  3 months ago
      I think as the restaurant prices go up the tip should go down.
    • nonyourbusiness  •  3 months ago
      ALL LIES !!!!!!!!!!! this is copied directly from the Dept of Labors website.........
      What is the minimum wage for workers who receive tips?

      The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires payment of at least the federal minimum wage to covered, nonexempt employees. An employer of a tipped employee is only required to pay $2.13 an hour in direct wages if that amount plus the tips received equals at least the federal minimum wage, the employee retains all tips and the employee customarily and regularly receives more than $30 a month in tips. If an employee's tips combined with the employer's direct wages of at least $2.13 an hour do not equal the federal minimum hourly wage, the employer must make up the difference.

      Some states have minimum wage laws specific to tipped employees. When an employee is subject to both the federal and state wage laws, the employee is entitled to the provisions which provides the greater benefits.

      *****please pay special attention to this statement....""""""the employer must make up the difference"""""""
      • Dawn 3 months ago
        no one ever has an employer make up the difference, you ignorant twit. How about you do a poll at your local restaurants and ask how many of them have ever made up the difference? You're just looking for a reason to be a redneck hick cheapskate. You would do well to remember these people are the ones handling your food and drink, and you sound stupid enough to keep going back to the same place after you stiff them over and over. You keep that right up, and you maybe should wonder why they giggle when you walk in.
      • nonyourbusiness 3 months ago
        It is NOT the burden of the consumer to pay the balance of the hourly wage, simply because the server CHOOSES to not be properly compensated for fear of being fired. Choosing to "not" protect your own labor rights is a CHOICE!!!!!! If you are not willing to protect your own labor rights, Then please don’t put your burden on the consumer.
    • James D  •  Danville, Kentucky  •  3 months ago
      I usually don't tip, period. It is my option. I absolutely refuse to go to a place that has a mandatory gratituity. A tip should be a reward for good service, not an obligation. It is the employeer's responsibility to pay their help adequately. 20% is generally accepted-that's absolute bull!!!

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