Previous 1 3
Topic: Tips
Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:17 AM

For those who eat out in nice restaurants, what do you do

when you get bad service, in a restaurant? Do you still give a good tip?

NOT fast foods people!!

TxsGal3333's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:23 AM
The way I see it if you can't afford to tip then eat fast food..

If the service is that bad then no I do not tip the 20%+.........

But I still tip regardless~~~

If service is good I tip automatically 20%~~~

If it is up and beyond then I tip a little more...

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:28 AM
Edited by Unknow on Thu 04/05/18 11:39 AM
Tell me, is it compulsory to tip in the states?
I've heard it is?

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:28 AM
Edited by Unknow on Thu 04/05/18 11:29 AM
spock

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:33 AM
I Ike to tip, however, I don't always tip the same amount! And I do tip even if the service is not that good. Rarely I get bad service where I go!

Also when I m with a date! He has to tip and if he is too cheap I. Will fill in for the tip.

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:35 AM

spock




People should tip or stay home and cook your own meal! :laugh

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:36 AM

The way I see it if you can't afford to tip then eat fast food..

If the service is that bad then no I do not tip the 20%+.........

But I still tip regardless~~~

If service is good I tip automatically 20%~~~

If it is up and beyond then I tip a little more...



I like your answer! 20% is what I think is appropriate. But some people do not even know that.

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:38 AM
I do not like fast food meals out.whoa Maybe coffee at Starbucks.

However, Starbucks is not cheap.:smile:

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:39 AM


spock




People should tip or stay home and cook your own meal! :laugh

Toody, the spock was because it double posted,
At least it didn't double tip laugh

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:44 AM
Are you not going to answer my question? whoa

NotPay4Play's photo
Thu 04/05/18 11:46 AM
Edited by NotPay4Play on Thu 04/05/18 11:47 AM

NOT fast foods people!!


You know your audience. laugh

I have tipped the server who took the best care of me. Even if they were assigned to a different area. I usually tip double the tax rounded up. About 17 % ish.

But there are restraunts i haven't been to in 15 years because the service and management were horrible. ill

As for a date. That's just a happy meal and a red box. laugh laugh

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:05 PM


NOT fast foods people!!


You know your audience. laugh

I have tipped the server who took the best care of me. Even if they were assigned to a different area. I usually tip double the tax rounded up. About 17 % ish.

But there are restraunts i haven't been to in 15 years because the service and management were horrible. ill

As for a date. That's just a happy meal and a red box. laugh laugh



Yes people do tip different, not same amounts. That's ok we all make our own. Choices.

I don't care if others take a date to McDonald's! laugh

Tom4Uhere's photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:05 PM

Tell me, is it compulsory to tip in the states?
I've heard it is?

20% is the going norm right now.
Its not really compulsory to leave a tip as in you will be persecuted the same as if you leave without paying your check but it is severely frowned upon and will be remembered when you visit again.

As far as I know (I may be wrong), food service workers are not applicable to minimum wage laws (this may have changed?).
On the W2 form it lists your reported income which includes wages, salaries and TIPS. So tips are reportable income.

As a mechanic for a fleet service, I never got tips but when I first started out I worked in the public sector and every once in awhile someone gave me a tip for a job well done. I never tracked them as reportable income, it was a winfall. It was the same as lottery winnings, never more than $50.

At a restaurant, part of the waitress/waiter's income is based on the tips they get. If you don't tip, you are cheating those people out of their income.

The tipped wage is base wage paid to an employee that receives a substantial portion of their compensation from tips. According to a common labor law provision referred to as a “tip credit”, the employee must earn at least the state’s minimum wage when tips and wages are combined or the employer is required to increase the wage to fulfill that threshold.
~ Wiki

The Trump administration proposes allowing tip-pooling in restaurants. Critics call it stealing workers’ wages.
Souce: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/food/wp/2017/12/07/the-trump-administration-proposes-allow-tip-pooling-in-restaurants-critics-call-it-stealing-workers-wages/

Similar to other forms of financial pools, tip pooling involves the collection of all (or a portion of all) the tips collected from directly tipped staff to be put into one large "pool." From here, tips are redistributed among a larger group of employees. Tip pooling ensures that all staff members are fairly compensated for their work, especially when there are multiple services being rendered and single points of payment.


United States: Tipping and Etiquette
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Travel-g191-s606/United-States:Tipping.And.Etiquette.html

Tipping practices can vary depending upon the location in the U.S., and even published guidance can vary greatly depending upon the source.

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:06 PM

Tell me, is it compulsory to tip in the states?
I've heard it is?


while it is not compulsory in the states. it is the norm because servers get paid sub minimum wage and the tips are considered part of their wage and must be reported for tax purposes.

that being said if service sux rotten eggs, i will not tip at all.

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:07 PM

Tell me, is it compulsory to tip in the states?
I've heard it is?



I can't answer for all of US.

Do you answer for England?

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:10 PM


Tell me, is it compulsory to tip in the states?
I've heard it is?


while it is not compulsory in the states. it is the norm because servers get paid sub minimum wage and the tips are considered part of their wage and must be reported for tax purposes.

that being said if service sux rotten eggs, i will not tip at all.



Tipping is also curtousy to the server. Many deserve a good tip.

Toodygirl5's photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:11 PM

Are you not going to answer my question? whoa



Yes tongue2

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:12 PM
Yes, it's not compulsory here.
But many restaurants use tips as a top up for poor wages where it should be it tip either shared between the staff or a tip for the person serving you.

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:12 PM
yes toody but if a server can't successfully serve then the gratuity is not earned. the word tip is actually the shortened form of To Insure Prompt Service.

no photo
Thu 04/05/18 12:12 PM


Tell me, is it compulsory to tip in the states?
I've heard it is?


while it is not compulsory in the states. it is the norm because servers get paid sub minimum wage and the tips are considered part of their wage and must be reported for tax purposes.

that being said if service sux rotten eggs, i will not tip at all.

Thanks eric :thumbsup:

Previous 1 3