15% if the service was average and the food got there in a reasonable amount of time, 20% if they did a good job, and 2 cents if they were absolute shitheads
heres the thing. Lets say you serve an average of three customers an hour and they all tip three dollars. thats ten dollars an hour which is $2.50 more than minemum wage where I live. durring dinner and lunch rushes were they probably serve 5-8 tables in an hour which generally will have atleast 2-5 people per table(nobody likes to eat alone) and you realize they are making off alot better than they like to let on. I have a friend who works at expensive steak house and she walks away each night with roughly $150 in tips. obviously everybody's not making that kind of money, but the opportunity is there.Space Spoons said:Something bad tippers don't generally understand is that when you're working that kind of job, you're pretty heavily reliant on your tips because wage laws in most states allows employers to pay less than minimum wage. We're talking, like, 2, maybe 3 dollars an hour.
I tip 15-20% when I can.
Same here.Jelly ^.^ said:Feels good to live in a country where employers are obligated to pay livable wages to their workers.
That scene is the first thing I thought when I saw the title.Flamezdudes said:I see no reason to tip them at all personally.
And because this will inevitably come up:
The Reservoir Dog's Tipping Scene:
gratuity is always over 100%...DeadlyYellow said:Huh. I thought gratuity was 15%.
By eating there aren't you technically paying their 'wages'.Weslebear said:Unless someone goes exceptionally out of their way to provide something out of the norm then no tip at all. I'm not paying someones wages for what they are supposed to do anyway, I don't give a shit if they are primarily paid on tips.