Fixed that.
This day has been way too damned long. Either that or I was at the hospital for tooo damned long.
This day has been way too damned long. Either that or I was at the hospital for tooo damned long.
BTW, I'm going to echo that the standard tip for restaurants should be 18-20%.
Fuck me, are you all made of money over there...???!!! 10% would be the most I'd tip in a restaurant here. I've never been in a hotel with a porter, but I'd never even think to leave a tip for the housekeeping staff. Nor for bar staff, Christ the drinks cost a bloody fortune, especially in a hotel bar. Wow, it's just a completely different culture.
What about cow tipping?I am actually better at tipping OVER in hotels, as opposed to tipping in them.
Waitress - 15%-18% standard (depends on how I have to round things off to get an even amount)
Waiter - 15% or so on the tab.
I'm going to have to ask you to explain the gender discrimination.
That's ridiclious. If that happened to me I'd be tempted to do a Christoper Moltisanti reaction on himI heard a story where a NY waiter chased a departing diner down the street, yelling what was wrong with the service, because he didn't tip 30%.
Wow, I guess that guy was cranky all the time then.
Yikes. That's nuts. I'd say an 18% average is pretty good.I know that at my restaurant, if you have an average tip percentage less than 18% (the exact number varies, I've seen it as high as 19.5%), they pretty much pull you aside and tell you that you need to be a better server or else your tip percentage wouldn't be so low. If you consistently keep it low, they'll start taking away tables or skipping you in rotation so you have more time to devote to your tables to give better service and get your percentage up.
The majority of servers have a tip percentage around 19. The best have 23% or so. I guess we're kinda helped by not having sales tax, so maybe money that would normally go there goes towards the tip.
When I say 'Meal' I mean the overall experience of food, service, etc.I'm frankly dumbfounded by friends who will plunk down 20% for a bad meal
Bad service, sure. But if you get served a bad meal, and you don't say anything to your server about it and instead eat it without complaint, you have only yourself to blame, and if the service is good, it's unfair to dock a server's tip because of the kitchen's mistakes.
I would add one qualification: If the server brings food that is not what you ordered (a friend of mine ordered a pasta dish with seafood alfredo and got a plate loaded with pasta, meat and marinara sauce and therefore got his meal at least 15 minutes after the rest of us got ours) or is not prepared as you requested, (if I order a cheeseburger without onions, it should arrive without onions), I think it's fair to reduce the tip accordingly since it is his/her responsibility to ensure that what is written on the ticket comes to the table.I'm frankly dumbfounded by friends who will plunk down 20% for a bad meal
Bad service, sure. But if you get served a bad meal, and you don't say anything to your server about it and instead eat it without complaint, you have only yourself to blame, and if the service is good, it's unfair to dock a server's tip because of the kitchen's mistakes.
Twenty percent is standard and easy to figure out, as well; and 30% in New York.
I heard a story where a NY waiter chased a departing diner down the street, yelling what was wrong with the service, because he didn't tip 30%.
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