It is $2.13 an hour.ravensheart18 said:No idea what the standard is in France, but in the US waiters in some places earn as little as $2/hr - their entire wage is their tip. It shouldn't be that way, but it is.
It will quickly turn into the customers problem. Either tip $2 or $3 and go about your business or pay $5 or $10 more for the food since the restaurant will have to make up the difference(but they will lose business since their food prices just went up 20-50 percent).Sindre1 said:Not the constumers problem is it?
Take it up with the union!
Some people just don't get it. Waiters/waitresses often make minimum wage. 90% of their income comes from tips. When you stiff them, you just robbed them of the reward of their hard work. I know some girls who will just slap $2 on the table and think nothing of it. They have no idea how the business works.Eri said:Last night I went out to eat with a friend. We decided to get one huge thing for 2 and split it. All on one check. In the end after tax it was about 35$. The service was definitely not bad. Maybe slightly above average.
I asked him to give me 3.5$ since it should be a 7$ tip. According to the regular 20%. He refused and said he was giving 2$. I said did you think she did a bad job? And he says no she was pretty good. I said so why then? He just says because I'm not giving more and ended the conversation there. Other countries might have different etiquette but in the US if they did well they should get 20%.
I've never worked in the restraunt business but I'm sure they despise bad tippers. Especially if they did a good job. Please don't be a bad tipper.
I can't really think of a reason to be cheap unless it was bad service. Am I missing something?
Its %15-20, though I've heard you can dip as low as 10 if you odnt mind being a miser.DeadlyYellow said:Huh. I thought gratuity was 15%.
To be fair, in the U.S. they're still required to be paid minimum wage by their employers. If their wage + tips doesn't add up to minimum wage, the employer is supposed to make up the difference and pay them minimum wage. I don't particularly like the assumed tipping system.ravensheart18 said:No idea what the standard is in France, but in the US waiters in some places earn as little as $2/hr - their entire wage is their tip. It shouldn't be that way, but it is.
See, that's just a terrible mistake on the behalf of America in general.nunqual said:Some people just don't get it. Waiters/waitresses often make minimum wage. 90% of their income comes from tips. When you stiff them, you just robbed them of the reward of their hard work. I know some girls who will just slap $2 on the table and think nothing of it. They have no idea how the business works.Eri said:Last night I went out to eat with a friend. We decided to get one huge thing for 2 and split it. All on one check. In the end after tax it was about 35$. The service was definitely not bad. Maybe slightly above average.
I asked him to give me 3.5$ since it should be a 7$ tip. According to the regular 20%. He refused and said he was giving 2$. I said did you think she did a bad job? And he says no she was pretty good. I said so why then? He just says because I'm not giving more and ended the conversation there. Other countries might have different etiquette but in the US if they did well they should get 20%.
I've never worked in the restraunt business but I'm sure they despise bad tippers. Especially if they did a good job. Please don't be a bad tipper.
I can't really think of a reason to be cheap unless it was bad service. Am I missing something?
If the service is bad, however, you have every right to withhold a tip. They did not deserve it.