If I pay a delivery fee, I don't pay a tip. I've already paid for the service so there is no extra service being provided that warrants a tip.
I don't tip for carryout, I imagine most people don't tip for carryout. It used to be that you tipped the driver for delivering your pizza. Now that they officially charge a delivery fee, it's more like a mandatory tip.Kecunk said:If anything I tip a little better for delivery because of the convenience it provides me.WeepingAngels said:So I usually tip $3 for pizza delivery but once you add in the $1.75 delivery fee, I end up tipping almost $5. That's too much for a $21 dollar order. Today though, I decided to pay $3 including the delivery fee. So $1.25 tip plus $1.75 delivery fee.
How do you guys handle it, if you tip at all?
I mean by your logic it sounds like you would tip better if you drove to the pizza place to pick up the pizza yourself because then there'd be no delivery fee.
The delivery fee isn't just some arbitrary fee its there because it cost the company more to offer delivery and it just doesn't seem cool to slight on the tip just cause the company wanted to cover some of its expenses.
I agree with this logic and coming around to completely letting the delivery fee be the tip and not paying the extra $1.25.KingsGambit said:If I pay a delivery fee, I don't pay a tip. I've already paid for the service so there is no extra service being provided that warrants a tip.
Surely this is not a great arguement. Its ok for those receiving the tips to understand but for those who actually have to pay them are ignorantmadwarper said:And, as for the tipping thread thing, we get many of these threads. And, imo, it's a case of "You had to be there". As in, unless you worked a job that depended on tips, you just aren't going to understand how tipping works. You'd have better luck explaining color to a blind person, or music to a deaf person.
It sounds like employers are cheating the drivers and customers are expected to make up the difference. Don't see how that is legal but it sure isn't ethical.DarthSka said:I don't know how it works in other countries, but here in the U.S.A, a delivery fee doesn't go to the driver. Plus, the driver's wage is very dependent on tips. Here, employees will earn minimum wage when in the store, but when they check out to do a delivery, their pay is reduced by about 3 dollars per hour and tips are expected to make it up. So basically, if drivers don't get tips, they make much less than what they would get if they were minimum wage full time. As such, I'm very much in favor of giving tips to delivery drivers.
They usually end up with people arguing over whether tipping is something you should do.WeepingAngels said:Are tipping threads bad or something?
I don't really care how much goes to the cook so why would I care how much goes to the driver? All I know is that I pay an extra fee to have it delivered and that used to be where the tip would come in.
I have a British opinion on this matter.shootthebandit said:Tipping threads usually go alone the lines of: person 1:"I tip generously, someone is relying on this money"
Person 2: "I dont get tips in my job so why should I tip a delivery driver/waiter who earns a minimum wage anyway"
M. Night. Shamalamamamamamaman plot twist. Person 1 is american and person 2 is british
In the first scenario, I would want the change. The advertised price is all I will pay.As a brit I tend not to tip unless say the driver shows up and it 9.50 ill just give him a tenner. I get incredibly pissed off when people add a service charge to my bill and i downright refuse to pay it. Its not that im tight but ive worked minimum wage in a warehouse in the past. It was tough work and i didnt see any tips. I dont see why one minimum wage job should get tips and one doesnt
Let's stop right here, because the thing you're not getting is this isn't just about you.shootthebandit said:Surely this is not a great arguement. Its ok for those receiving the tips to understand but for those who actually have to pay them are ignorant
There are no jobs in the UK that depend on tips.
The cook actually gets paid minimum wage or better. The driver gets paid below minimum wage because he has a job that can get tips. The federal minimum wage for cooks is $7.25 (alongside most jobs); the federal minimum wage for drivers is only $2.13!WeepingAngels said:Why not count the delivery fee as part of the tip? I mean why am I giving a tip to the driver but not the cook? Isn't it because the driver actually delivered my pizza and if that's the case, then isn't the tip really just a second delivery fee? If I had picked up the pizza, should I tip the cook if he or she was friendly?
Same problem here. I have tipped somewhere around 30-40% just to be certain.Muspelheim said:I'm not part of a tipping culture, which makes going abroad a little bit difficult. I have only a vague idea of how much to tip and when, and I just know that I'm making a huge twat of myself whenever I go out. It's not that I mind tipping, it's just something I'm not accustomed to.
I likely tip far too much out of fear when I'm expected to. It must be an amusing sight, a quivering skeleton of a man insistantly overpaying. I make a good guest, I'm sure.
If you want tipping to be abolished, you should stop participating. It should be illegal to underpay your employees and expect (and even guilt) customers to make up the difference directly.dyre said:The cook actually gets paid minimum wage or better. The driver gets paid below minimum wage because he has a job that can get tips. The federal minimum wage for cooks is $7.25 (alongside most jobs); the federal minimum wage for drivers is only $2.13!WeepingAngels said:Why not count the delivery fee as part of the tip? I mean why am I giving a tip to the driver but not the cook? Isn't it because the driver actually delivered my pizza and if that's the case, then isn't the tip really just a second delivery fee? If I had picked up the pizza, should I tip the cook if he or she was friendly?
Those guys rely on your tips to live. Personally I'd like to see this whole tipping business be abolished altogether and have everyone get paid the full $7.25 (or higher if they raise the minimum wage), but until then, I pay drivers a bit extra because I can afford it and they really, really need it.
Usually im an advocate of paying the price shown but if I have a tenner and its £9 something then im not too bothered about a few penceFlames66 said:In the first scenario, I would want the change. The advertised price is all I will pay.
Its not very common over here but I have seen it a couple of times, they basically add a 10-20% surcharge on your bill for service. If it happens to me I speak to the manager demand to get it taken off the bill if they refuse I would simply walk out and refuse to pay anything and never give them your custom again (fortunately its never gone that far).In the second scenario, I don't think I have ever encountered a service charge so I'm not sure quite how they work. If I was to encounter one that was included in the price of the overall meal I probably wouldn't notice. If it was added on afterwards I would refuse to pay it as I will only pay the price that is written on the menu for any item.
*sigh*WeepingAngels said:If you want tipping to be abolished, you should stop participating. It should be illegal to underpay your employees and expect (and even guilt) customers to make up the difference directly.dyre said:The cook actually gets paid minimum wage or better. The driver gets paid below minimum wage because he has a job that can get tips. The federal minimum wage for cooks is $7.25 (alongside most jobs); the federal minimum wage for drivers is only $2.13!WeepingAngels said:Why not count the delivery fee as part of the tip? I mean why am I giving a tip to the driver but not the cook? Isn't it because the driver actually delivered my pizza and if that's the case, then isn't the tip really just a second delivery fee? If I had picked up the pizza, should I tip the cook if he or she was friendly?
Those guys rely on your tips to live. Personally I'd like to see this whole tipping business be abolished altogether and have everyone get paid the full $7.25 (or higher if they raise the minimum wage), but until then, I pay drivers a bit extra because I can afford it and they really, really need it.
I honestly can't believe people are blaming customers for drivers being underpaid rather than their employers.
Its not just about me. Which is why as Ive said several times that every time I visit the US I will tip 10-20% (usually nearer 20).madwarper said:Let's stop right here, because the thing you're not getting is this isn't just about you.shootthebandit said:Surely this is not a great arguement. Its ok for those receiving the tips to understand but for those who actually have to pay them are ignorant
There are no jobs in the UK that depend on tips.
Sure, Europeans have earned a reputation of being culturally ignorant when it comes to tipping in the US, but it's not a trait that's unique to you. Because, if you remember that in these threads, someone invariably posts that asinine clip from Reservoir Dogs.
dyre said:Guilt trip? Won't someone think of the poor driver?WeepingAngels said:The only one you're hurting is the driver. He'll just have to scrape by with a few dollars less.dyre said:The cook actually gets paid minimum wage or better. The driver gets paid below minimum wage because he has a job that can get tips. The federal minimum wage for cooks is $7.25 (alongside most jobs); the federal minimum wage for drivers is only $2.13!WeepingAngels said:Why not count the delivery fee as part of the tip? I mean why am I giving a tip to the driver but not the cook? Isn't it because the driver actually delivered my pizza and if that's the case, then isn't the tip really just a second delivery fee? If I had picked up the pizza, should I tip the cook if he or she was friendly?
Those guys rely on your tips to live. Personally I'd like to see this whole tipping business be abolished altogether and have everyone get paid the full $7.25 (or higher if they raise the minimum wage), but until then, I pay drivers a bit extra because I can afford it and they really, really need it.
Here's what would happen if people stopped tipping pizza drivers. Fewer and fewer people would be willing or able to deliver pizza and that would force employers to:
1) Pay the drivers min wage at the least
2) Give the delivery fee to the driver
3) Stop offering pizza delivery
You don't stop a practice you don't agree with by continuing to participate in said practice.