Lenny Rider
Well-known member
- Sep 15, 2010
- 5,987
Between 10 and 15 depending on the level of the service
The US don't generally pay a living wage on the ground floor tho eh? Servers in any shape or form rely on tips to the extent that they tend to sometimes get abusive if they don't receive them in that most most backward of countriesThe states now have this unbelievable con at checkout at places like Starbucks where they ask if you want to give a tip. The tip usually starts at 20%....I had a hotdog on the side of the road the other day and they even tried to con a tip.
Unbelievable
Nobody ever tipped me when I worked behind a bar at the Amex.As an aside I worked as a waiter in my student days and know how difficult the job can be, and what a huge difference to my morale a good tip can do.
We tipped never less than 15% but around that mark and all was fine. Smiles and have a nice day.If you don’t tip around 20% in NYC , you are likely to get a very unhappy waiter asking you why not !
Never seen an abusive server, but have seen many an abusive customer…We tipped never less than 15% but around that mark and all was fine. Smiles and have a nice day.
Not the chasing after us looking for aggro
It’s cash businesses, many people can’t but help themselves to putting £20 in their pocket. On repeat.The only time I don't tip is when the food and service is bad or when the server admits they don't get share of the tips.
I've managed pubs for a number of years and you'd be surprised how much money is lost to dishonest servers and managers. I've fired 4 waitresses for not sharing their tips and told others the should look for another job if they don't agreewith the tronc system.
I took over a pub where one horrible beast of a waitress was taking home £300 a week in tips, delegated all the crap jobs to the teenagers and refused to tip out to the kitchen or food runners. She lasted a month, she was perfectly happy that the kitchen were sharing £100 a week between 6 of them.
It’s cash businesses, many people can’t but help themselves to putting £20 in their pocket. On repeat.
0% here in Japan. No tip culture here in Japan fortunately.
No idea why they put Italy down as 10%, as I said I've travelled far and wide in the country and nobody expects you to tip, and I normally haven't seen anybody I know who goes out to a restaurant leaving a tip. You pay what's on the bill. Maybe they mean the cover charge that's already on the bill, but that's not really a tip.Blue Countries = No Tip including Japan.