15-20 % for lunch 20-25% for dinner. If the food or help was great bump it up depending on how great it was. For me anyway that's how it is
It is pretty weird, but I think $5 dollars is perfectly fine for a country were it isn't customary. The reasoning behind tipping is that the price on the menu pays for the food, and the act of being served is completely separate, therefore a waitstaff's pay is directly proportional to their performance, prompting them to work harder to make the dining experience better for you the customer so they will get rewarded.MissShortosity said:Many thanks for the infoEClaris said:For parties of 8 or more it is automatically added unless you talk to the manager (we had to do this once, the server was terrible and because we were a large party he automatically got his tip, the manager apologized took his tip away and we got free desserts)
however, if it's a party of 8 or below can choose the amount the tip by writing it on the receipt, or leaving the cashI still think its a weird custom though. Why not just put the price of the food up a dollar or two more so your staff get guaranteed proper wages and no one has to worry about maths at the dinner table and everyone's happy??
I will reserve tips for exceptional service and exceptional staff where i see it's deserved, but it'd never be more than $5, because its not customary and because I'm a uni student.
Tipping in Australia is kind of restricted to the small change you have left over being placed in a glass or a jar at the counter...
Hmm, I get your point, however, I believe 'commission' for waitstaff is an extremely logical concept, because customers walk into a restaurant with the intention of eating food, thus you don't have to convince them to buy anything. Additionally, whilst the delivery of the food is separate from its preparation, it is still a necessary process of the dining experience... that plate of food isn't going to walk to the table buy itself, and the chef probably doesn't have the time to find out what every person wants...EClaris said:It is pretty weird, but I think $5 dollars is perfectly fine for a country were it isn't customary. The reasoning behind tipping is that the price on the menu pays for the food, and the act of being served is completely separate, therefore a waitstaff's pay is directly proportional to their performance, prompting them to work harder to make the dining experience better for you the customer so they will get rewarded.
Think of it similar to working on commission. Kind of
I tip 20% even though I can't afford it.Queen Michael said:I tip 20% because I can afford it.
Yeah, tipping always implies service to me. I'm not sure, logically, why to me a barber or waiter performs a service while a soda jerk doesn't, but I never tip the soda jerks.Uszi said:ON THE OTHER HAND:
I don't tip when the person hasn't provide some sort of extra service. I do tip delivery drivers, I tip waiters, I tip cab drivers, I tip the hotel concierge, etc usually because in those examples one can receive a gradient of service, and they're usually working much harder than what they're being paid (minimum wage or less). I do not tip the people at Cold Stone, Star Bucks, or any other place where I have to stand in line, pick up my shit from the counter, get my own fountain drinks, and the people aren't doing anything extra that they aren't already paid to do.
Your barber, waiter, bartender all have to use some sort of skill. There is a measure of individual input on the part of that service person to make the job good.Regiment said:Yeah, tipping always implies service to me. I'm not sure, logically, why to me a barber or waiter performs a service while a soda jerk doesn't, but I never tip the soda jerks.