How much do you tip?

Ok. This explanation is clear and helpful.

@bgriffin wrote:

@1cent wrote:

Other people are sharing their guilt reasons for tipping. I have worked a few service jobs. Saw coworkers vary their service based on who they thought was worth it and gave extras for free to their regulars. Sometimes they even demanded tips. I always made more in total just by giving fair and consistent service. I guess that’s why I feel level about it now. No one starves because one person didn’t give them $5. If they’re holding out a hand, they might as well stand on the corner.

I also feel like a lot of people don't really get a grasp of how much they're tipping. I mean yes they know the dollar amount they are tipping but they don't really break that down to a per hour amount when they do it. Consider these examples:

Let's say you go to a restaurant that runs you $200 for a couple and lets say your waiter only has 2 tables (probably 4 but I digress). Your entire experience is exactly 1 hour and you tip 20%. Your tip comes to $40. Sure the waiter has to tip out the bartender and busboy but he's still keeping $30 of that tip. And he has 2 tables. So he's making $60 an hour. And likely has more than 2 tables. And yet people are going to turn their noses up at someone who sticks with the old standard of 15%. Where the waiter is still making $40 an hour which is well above median income in every single market in the US.

Let's say you're a hotel housekeeper where you clean an average of 12 rooms a day in an 8 hour shift. The average is actually 13-15 but let's stick with 12 because math. If everyone tips $5 as was suggested above then that's an extra $60 of untaxed income per day for the housekeeper. Or $7.50 per hour which, after the tax benefit, is worth more per hour than their salary if it was minimum wage. Now can we have a discussion about minimum wage? Absolutely, but that's not germane to the subject. Even in somewhere like Seattle where minimum wage is already $15 an hour you're adding a 50% bump to their salary. Just because you feel bad their employer isn't paying them what they're worth.

Or take our valet example. In an 8 hour shift a hotel valet will likely touch a car 40 times. That's 5 an hour, which seems low but we'll go with it. At the suggested $5 per above that's $200, or $50 per hour, in addition to their pay (which is likely tipped employee levels so we'll call it nonexistent). $50 per hour would be an earning rate of $100,000 per year. But hey we should all tip that much...……..

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That was exactly my point Steve. If every customer tipped $5 every time a Valet touched their car they'd be making $200,000 a year! Yet people who tip $2 on departure (and usually I tip better than that) are looked down on!

There are reasons that a body stays in motion
At the moment only demons come to mind
This rings true, too smiling smiley I think the fear is being out of place & trying to fit in.

@SteveSoCal wrote:

...and there's also a difference between 'tipping guidelines' and 'suggested tips', or 'maximum tip reimbursement'.

I am embarrassed to do 50% of the tasks asked of me on hotel assignments. The MSC employees and shoppers are also getting the same pay they were 10 years ago. Less in some circumstances.

Here's the reality; You are not staying in the hotel as an actual guest. The staff there are essentially co-workers. It's great that you want your co-workers to be paid more and are willing to take money out of your own pocket to ensure that. I wish more people at my workplace were like that. However, as much as you may feel like a VIP staying at that hotel, you are there on an assignment.

Either stay there on your own dime and be as generous as you want with your tips, or follow the guidelines. At a minimum, you should ask the MSC if they mind you increasing the tips. I have requested an allowance for increased tips at certain resorts and received it.

BTW, before there were tipping guidelines for the MSC I used to work for, it may not be surprising to know that shoppers went overboard with tips. It was particularly heinous when shoppers would offer a narrative the tipping experience, such as, "I gave the bellman a $20 and didn't even get a smile." There was a basic lack of understanding that the person reading the report was footing the bill for the extravagant tip.

It's easy to be generous with $15 when the other 50% of tips and the entire hotel bill are being covered. I think the real embarrassment in undertipping is the fear that the truth may be more evident with a poor tip: Most of us cannot really afford to stay at that property...
@LindaM wrote:

I think the fear is being out of place & trying to fit in.

Just know that rich people are some of the cheapest people you will ever deal with. Tipping more doesn't make you seem wealthy...

As someone who used to care about the instructions they put out and guide shoppers through all this stuff, I would spend hours watching the front desk, listening in on concierge requests, and spying on all the goings on outside the hotel. The only ones throwing money around are those trying to make an impression.

Standards are continually changing, though. I recently acquired a PHEV. Valet staff who offer to put my car on a charger when I'm parking at a hotel get tipped on the drop-off, since it's also saving me tome and money.
@SteveSoCal wrote:


Case in point; A certain hotel assignment used to specifically require the shopper to stiff the bellman on arrival when they collected the luggage and report on the response. I was absolutely put off by the request and mentioned it to another shopper that had recently been to the hotel. They told me that they just tipped the bellman out of guilt and didn't claim the tip for reimbursement. I decided to go through with the test and it was honestly really difficult to do. The bellman stuck out it hand for tip in the end after giving really awesome service (It is a very famous 5-star hotel in NYC) and I just shook his hand, then walked away. My luggage never arrived in the room!

It took hours to hunt the luggage down, BTW. They finally found it with no tags on it placed behind a door in the bell closet. Now, I get it that the bellman was pissed, but there are a variety of reasons why a customer may not tip and does a 5-star property want bags going missing for everyone who doesn't tip the bellman?

Was the client serviced by receiving the information? Definitely. Was it a horrible MS experience. Absolutely!...but that's the job.


Just to clarify - cause I think I am the shopper who just tipped out of guilt. I remember discussing this shop with you. But in my defense- my scenario was on the way out (with the doorman) - and it was tip them $2 after they had hailed a cab and settled you in with the luggage (the MSC acknowledged that $2 for NYC was an extremely LOW tip and considered "stiffing"winking smiley. I did go through with the scenario as that was the shop (the guy actually didn't even look at the amount of money I had given him and the service that I got was the same as always) but then after he had walked away I chased him down and gave him another $5 mentioning that I had meant to give it to him all along. It was the final interaction at the hotel so I felt comfortable that I had gathered the required data while still doing what I felt was right. I am grateful that I never got the stiff the Bellperson on the way in scenario. That would have been really hard for me to do.


Some companies are fine with you tipping more - they just don't want to reimburse them. Others specifically say that you should not tip more than what is specified for the reason that Steve mentioned, they don't want it to be an out of the ordinary tip.
@MickeyB wrote:


Just to clarify - cause I think I am the shopper who just tipped out of guilt. I remember discussing this shop with you. But in my defense- my scenario was on the way out.

LOL....I didn't want to call you out by name smiling smiley
While we are on the topic of uncomfortable scenarios related to tipping and evaluations. There is the flip side of this - when the shop scenario requires you to give an unusually high tip to see if this curries favor or results in the employee giving out things they shouldn't (upgrades/drinks/etc.) I think I might hate those just as much.

The tip the bartender $20 after the first round is bad enough, but the worst is the "slip the front desk agent a $100 bill while asking for an upgrade to a suite" - AWKWARD I've done it once and I never, ever, want to do that again.
Kiplinger recently released a guideline on tipping. I found it to be reasonable (and surprising, in many instances).
Valet tipping has to differ as they are owned by different companies. We just got Valet parking at our mall and each employee keeps tip for himself. Take out at a popular restaurant now has Valet parking for pickup, one employee works there and keeps tip, larger places probably share, not for us to know or care, give what you give and move on. Years ago in Vegas, my ex was the Appraiser for Caesar Palace, and we got a suite and dinner show, still he tipped a twenty then it was like a hundred today, and we got front row table, sorry, can't help comparing, Frank Sinatra shows to the now concerts where a tip was the lesser evil. Tipping today doesn't really bring better service, 2.00 or 5.00 for valet gets same service.

Live consciously....
Valet, I tip when I pick up my car. Normally, it's $2, sometimes if my car is especially filthy, I pop for $5. I prefer not to valet, because my car is always a pigsty.

Servers, I tip 20% because I worked as a server and it's how servers pay their bills. That said, if it isn't a mystery shop and the service was lousy the tip goes down.

I always tip the maids a minimum of $2 per night depending on the property or $5 if I'm paying with points. I am bad about not leaving a tip everyday. Most properties will have the staff pool the tips, but you never know. The maids are in the same boat as servers and tips pay the bills.

Live your life in such a way that when your feet hit the floor in the morning; the devil shudders...And yells OH #%*+! SHE'S AWAKE!
@MA Smith wrote:

The maids are in the same boat as servers and tips pay the bills.

No. They're not. Maids are not paid at a tipped pay wage. They are subject to the minimum wage laws in their jurisdiction. Are they underpaid? Maybe? Are they well paid? Maybe? I have no clue but I know they get at least minimum wage. How much they are paid is between them and their employer. I have nothing to do with it.

There are reasons that a body stays in motion
At the moment only demons come to mind
@callinectes wrote:

I always tip housekeeping well, especially if I am staying multiple nights.
I tip housekeeping $2 per time they come to the room (plus whatever change I have), left on the nightstand at the end of the stay. But I'm the sort that cleans the rooms, strips the bed, etc before I leave.
Depends on the service at a restaurant. I have left two pennies before for horrible service, and I have left more than the cost of the meal when it's been exceptional.
$20 for the train sleeper attendant at the end of the trip (as long as the bathrooms are clean and service is good.)
On cruises, it depends on the cruise line. I hate it when they're pooled and will often leave a gift card instead (because it doesn't get pooled.)

"Let me offer you my definition of social justice: I keep what I earn and you keep what you earn. Do you disagree? Well then tell me how much of what I earn belongs to you - and why?” ~Walter Williams
I am a valet tipper of $5.00 every time they touch my car. I get great service! There are no laws governing this, I can afford it and appreciate the service. CureMS would understand.
Some restaurants (casual) have the machine thingy on the table like Red Robin and it tells you clearly how much to tip, they usually set it at 20%, they have good service, but I tip 15% for a burger, reimbursement or not.
Afterthought: with Trumpster's tariffs, I have noticed everywhere I go prices have gone up 25%, where is our tip/raise, we are making less and paying more, anyone care, sometimes our jobs pay less than minimum wage.

Live consciously....
I will admit I'm wrong. In my neighborhood, maids are paid server wages.
That said, if someone makes sure I have clean sheets and clean towels in a hotel is worth a few bucks every day. And I don't have issues giving the service staff a few bucks every day.

Live your life in such a way that when your feet hit the floor in the morning; the devil shudders...And yells OH #%*+! SHE'S AWAKE!
@MickeyB wrote:

The tip the bartender $20 after the first round is bad enough, but the worst is the "slip the front desk agent a $100 bill while asking for an upgrade to a suite" - AWKWARD I've done it once and I never, ever, want to do that again.

I did a hotel mystery shop about 6 years ago where I was supposed to cup a $20 in my hand sneaky like and slip it to the clerk while asking for an upgrade. I did it and of course it worked. My first thought was "Oh my god that works I can't wait to try that myself in real life." Since that moment I have used that trick a lot. It works at least half the time. Craziest time I did that was at the 4 Queens Casino in Las Vegas that I had booked on the internet for 5 nights at $29 each. I slip the clerk who speaks poor broken English a $20 dollar bill while asking for a complimentary upgrade to a suite. He steps back and looks around and nods a yes and continues to check me in. Nothing more is ever said about it and I am not even sure he understood. I get up to my room and open the door and its a full fledged high roller suite. It was so incredible my first thought was that it was that this was so wrong that I had better just get out of there. I forced myself to get over that. The 4 Queens is an absolute dump down on Fremont St but they got a pretty nice high rollers suite. Did that same trick at the Flamingo in Vegas once and ended up in a super suite looking out on the strip straight across from the fountains at Caesars.

Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/15/2019 01:49PM by Sobrokeigot2dothis.
So recently I had the housekeeping tip discussion with someone and learned some things. To me, housekeeping's entire job is to clean an empty room so the hotel can rent it again. That's a service to the hotel, not me. But apparently there are people who use housekeeping as like a personal maid? I generally have no interaction whatsoever with housekeeping when I stay at a hotel, so I don't understand tipping them. I am guessing that people who think they should be tipped are probably having them do things for them?

There are reasons that a body stays in motion
At the moment only demons come to mind
I disagree, years ago and not that many, you never thought of tipping housekeeping. The past few years they decided they wanted a tip, maybe for doing extra things which is fine, however the reminder they now leave says "they" want a tip regardless. I never leave a tip for housekeeping as I don't have them do anything extra.
Making up the bed is their job, but since many don't want to be seen as cheap, especially staying in a 5 star hotel, they'll leave a tip, so this has proved beneficial to them.

I ordered a salad to go at the to go counter (not a job) yesterday and on the receipt it say's tip and a space, the cashier did nothing but smile and take my order, no service, no tip.

Live consciously....
Well I am glad that you two, BGriff and Irene opened up this discussion because I also never tipped the housekeeper. But then on the other hand I never stayed at a 5* or even 4*resort. Most of my hotel stays have been on the road for one night and when I stay for several nights like on a vacation I use the same towels (even before we were asked to as I am an environmentalist all my life). I never make a mess but if I do I clean it up so basically all they need to do for me is make the bed and at the end do the regular cleaning. Once I stayed in a hotel and never thought to check the clock radio. At 5:30 AM it came on blaring lively Mexican music. I think that maid should have left me a tip! Seems to me part of their job between guests should be to make sure those things are re set. That place also had a stuffed toilet. They brought a plunger to my room and handed it to me. It was a well known chain of 3* places. Now I know better. The first time I heard of tipping the maid was once when I went with friends to Mexico. Well, down there perhaps the maids do not get paid at all and it is all tips but even if paid I am sure they do not get much. If I ever do a 5* and actually get some service other than put the cover back on the bed I will leave a tip.
For shops or non-shops, when you call to place a carryout order and pick it up what do you tip?
One of the MSCs I work with mandates tipping 15% for poor service, 18% for average, and 20% for excellent service. Generally, I follow suit, on non-shops.

On my own, I tip 15% for carryout, for casual and fine dining.
Interesting. My parents always tipped housekeepers when I was a child in the 1950s and a teenager in the 1960s. So this is not a recent development. I decided to look this up to see what is considered correct. According to TripAdvisor, 2/3 of Americans tip housekeepers and only 1/3 do not. BTW, 3% of Americans do not tip restaurant staff. Here is an article on this topic from Travel and Leisure that I found interesting to read: [www.travelandleisure.com] This is a link to an 8-year-old article from CNN that discusses this topic and quotes professors from schools of hotel administration among others: [www.cnn.com] I have personally concluded that my parents were right, and I will continue to leave tips for housekeepers in the US. Before retiring, I traveled extensively internationally for work and will add that in some countries tips (restaurants, hotels, taxis, etc.) are not expected or are even refused. If you want to know "How to Tip in 25 Countries Around the World", here is another article from Travel and Leisure: [www.travelandleisure.com]

Shopping Southeast Pennsylvania, Delaware above the canal, and South Jersey since 2008
I don't tip for carry out or fast food places. I tip housekeeping based on my usage. One time I took a bath and filled the tub with rose petals. I left $5.

I generally tip according to guidelines and don't deviate. So if the max reimbursement is $X, I'll tip $X and not more even if I'm allowed.

I've always wanted to try the $20 tip but I'd be too nervous and embarrassed if it didn't work.
@JL-Baltimore wrote:

For shops or non-shops, when you call to place a carryout order and pick it up what do you tip?

I never really thought about tipping for carry out until I worked at a tavern where the servers had to do everything but cook for take out in the middle of having to do their tables and weren't compensated more than their regular $2.13 hourly wage. They also get taxed on tip, whether it happens or not (I know you can contest the taxes, but it's still a crappy way to do business).
I wish they would make it easy and just tell us which employees are paid regular and which are tipped lol.

Shopping the South Jersey Shore
I hate the whole tipping culture in the USA. After traveling to New Zealand, their system is so much better. Prices include all gratuity as well as taxes. You always know what you're going to pay. Servers are paid a livable wage and provide great service. And my favorite part is that when you are ready to go at a restaurant, you simply get up, walk up to the counter or host booth, tell them where you were sitting, and they give you your check there, which can be paid immediately. There is no awkward waiting/asking for the check and your credit card never leaves your sight.
@quovatis wrote:

After traveling to New Zealand, their system is so much better. Prices include all gratuity as well as taxes.
My problem with this is that a poor server makes the same as an excellent one. What incentive, other than a personal work ethic, does a server have to go the extra mile when s/he is earning the same as someone doing the bare minimum?

"Let me offer you my definition of social justice: I keep what I earn and you keep what you earn. Do you disagree? Well then tell me how much of what I earn belongs to you - and why?” ~Walter Williams
@iShop123 wrote:

@quovatis wrote:

After traveling to New Zealand, their system is so much better. Prices include all gratuity as well as taxes.
My problem with this is that a poor server makes the same as an excellent one. What incentive, other than a personal work ethic, does a server have to go the extra mile when s/he is earning the same as someone doing the bare minimum?
You could say that about any profession.
@iShop123 wrote:

@quovatis wrote:

After traveling to New Zealand, their system is so much better. Prices include all gratuity as well as taxes.
My problem with this is that a poor server makes the same as an excellent one. What incentive, other than a personal work ethic, does a server have to go the extra mile when s/he is earning the same as someone doing the bare minimum?

The better servers would get the better jobs.

Edited to add: There's no reason to think every server would be paid the same rate. Just like there's no reason to think that every salesperson in Macy's is paid the same. Why would you?

There are reasons that a body stays in motion
At the moment only demons come to mind


Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/21/2019 03:14AM by bgriffin.
@bgriffin wrote:

@iShop123 wrote:

@quovatis wrote:

After traveling to New Zealand, their system is so much better. Prices include all gratuity as well as taxes.
My problem with this is that a poor server makes the same as an excellent one. What incentive, other than a personal work ethic, does a server have to go the extra mile when s/he is earning the same as someone doing the bare minimum?

The better servers would get the better jobs.

Edited to add: There's no reason to think every server would be paid the same rate. Just like there's no reason to think that every salesperson in Macy's is paid the same. Why would you?

Live consciously....
Macy's does pay the same, my sister worked for Saks and both are owned by Federated, along with other stores, so I know, although my sister made commission by selling upscale couture, and normal Macy's workers make not much above minimum wage with no commission. They also now do more work as they have cut their staff. I know the Manager, she knows my background, and we talk.
Not all are paid the same, however, commission workers have a quota and do bring in high buying customers.

Live consciously....


Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/21/2019 06:18PM by Irene_L.A..
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