Tipping is getting ridiculous

I like watching the videos of the asshole Uber or GrubHub people bitching about people not tipping enough.

They will complain about only getting a $5 tip on a $20 order. It's insane

in that scenario it's the companies job to pay the employee better imo. You guys front the car and do literally everything and the customer is supposed to reimburse you this? We do bro...service fees and extra cost of items. I don't care that you drove from Bumfuckistan to get my food.

Get a new job??
 
Found it. I can't tell if the restaurant has been identified or not. If you find it, let us know.


And there is the problem. The 20% is expected, regardless of service level. Here our tax is right around 7.8%, so if I double the tax on any given check, that's 15%. 15% for me is the bottom line, unless for some reason I feel that the service was terrible. I will still generally leave 10%, if I think its not the servers fault, like the kitchen is fucked, or the servers is covering may too many tables to provide good service, which is an establishment issue. Especially if I see the server is obviously trying. If I get exceptional service I will go 25% easily, and maybe even more depending on how good it was. In a nice place, or a less than high end place, the server can make or break the experience. I don't need to be coddled, but things like making suggestions, offering up things that may not be on the menu, or providing a level of service that shows a general caring for the customer should be appreciated, as they arent required to go as far some do.

There are couple of places here that I request the servers. There is one place I call before I go, and if Sheila isn't working, I wont go. If she is working, I will wait for her section, because she is gives a shit about what she does and treats it like a craft and not a job. The rest of the entitled fuckheads there act like they are doing me a favor.
 
And there is the problem. The 20% is expected, regardless of service level. Here our tax is right around 7.8%, so if I double the tax on any given check, that's 15%. 15% for me is the bottom line, unless for some reason I feel that the service was terrible. I will still generally leave 10%, if I think its not the servers fault, like the kitchen is fucked, or the servers is covering may too many tables to provide good service, which is an establishment issue. Especially if I see the server is obviously trying. If I get exceptional service I will go 25% easily, and maybe even more depending on how good it was. In a nice place, or a less than high end place, the server can make or break the experience. I don't need to be coddled, but things like making suggestions, offering up things that may not be on the menu, or providing a level of service that shows a general caring for the customer should be appreciated, as they arent required to go as far some do.

There are couple of places here that I request the servers. There is one place I call before I go, and if Sheila isn't working, I wont go. If she is working, I will wait for her section, because she is gives a shit about what she does and treats it like a craft and not a job. The rest of the entitled fuckheads there act like they are doing me a favor.
For average restaurant sit down service, 15% is right. If the service is great then the tip goes up. I would never tip at a fast food place or for a Starbucks take out coffee. I have no guilt feelings about hitting the "no tip" button at take out places.
 
For average restaurant sit down service, 15% is right. If the service is great then the tip goes up. I would never tip at a fast food place or for a Starbucks take out coffee. I have no guilt feelings about hitting the "no tip" button at take out places.
If I have a loose dollar in my pocket, I might throw it in a tip jar, maybe
 
I recently went to a car wash. Mind you this was an automated car wash. No human hands touched my car. No hand drying when it was done. But they had an attendant collecting the payment at the front and he did the “it’s just going to ask you a question” look away. It took all my energy not to tell him he has a lot of nerve. Tip you for what? Taking my money?
 
I may go full jerk and stop tipping all together just to stick it to the tipping system. Boycott the whole thing because it is getting ridiculous. It used to be, and I was totally fine with this, you go get yourself a cup of coffee and the nice employee spins the ipad around and you give a $1 tip for your $3 coffee. Well now that $3 coffee has turned into a $6 coffee by itself and now the tips are getting into the range of $2.50-$3 per cup of coffee.

You know how when they show you the ipad with the three automated tipping choices, the lowest used to be like $0.75 and now the lowest is $2.50. So my once cup of coffee that was $3 and for being nice $4 total, is now in the range of $8.50. It's out of control. On top of that, it seems everywhere now is a tip option.

Find me a restaurant or coffee shop that does accept tips, that the employees are getting paid enough to where a tip is no longer needed.
Throw down a quarter and ask them for change for that shitty cup of joe.
 
Tipping should be eliminated. The employer should be paying their employees, not the customers.

That said, I'm a very generous tipper.
I usually tip well for good service. 25% or more.

Bad service gets something but very small. That way they know I didn't forget just I don't think the service was worth more.

If I go the whole meal without asking me for a refill you get down close to the $1 as I can get.
 
Interesting if you read the whole thread


Tipping is still not out of control up here in Canuckistan. 15% is expected for basic service and the ownership doesn't try to pad the bill like they seem to in the US. I saw somebody post a restaurant bill that identified a service charge for healthcare!! Imagine that. The deadbeat owner wants the public to pay for his staff's healthcare.
 
At one point, the justification for tipping is the owners weren’t paying the workers enough, presumably to keep prices affordable. I went to Chipotle on Monday for a pick-up order for three people. The total was $50 before tax and they wanted a tip on top of that. Remind me again why you can’t afford to pay your employees?
 
Tipping for pick-up is absurd.

Do people tip fast food workers? They do a hell of a lot more than just hand you a bag of food.
 
They [fast food workers] do a hell of a lot more than just hand you a bag of food.
Agreed. They wear band-aids, wipe their noses with bare hands, look homeless and usually have absolute shit attitudes.
 
At one point, the justification for tipping is the owners weren’t paying the workers enough, presumably to keep prices affordable. I went to Chipotle on Monday for a pick-up order for three people. The total was $50 before tax and they wanted a tip on top of that. Remind me again why you can’t afford to pay your employees?
Never tip for take out.
 
Here's a tip:

Don't become employed anywhere where you are dependent on the gratuity of complete strangers for your income. Those jobs are not for people raising a family. You should be way beyond those skills by the time you start building a family.
 
Here's a tip:

Don't become employed anywhere where you are dependent on the gratuity of complete strangers for your income. Those jobs are not for people raising a family. You should be way beyond those skills by the time you start building a family.
Hell, I've tipped the cook in greasy spoons before. The bill should be for the food only. The tip is to pay the waitress or cook for their work.
 
My mother was a professional waitress. She made decent money because she was very good at her job. Hint: It wasn't the restaurant that paid her.
 
At one point, the justification for tipping is the owners weren’t paying the workers enough, presumably to keep prices affordable. I went to Chipotle on Monday for a pick-up order for three people. The total was $50 before tax and they wanted a tip on top of that. Remind me again why you can’t afford to pay your employees?
It began to be a regular thing in the restaurant business during the depression. Prior to that it was limited to jobs like porters and barbers. Thats pretty much the only way those professions got paid.
 
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