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Tips on tipping for travelers

March 28, 2004

Teresa Morris is the kind of person who always leaves a tip – generous for good service, small if it’s substandard.

But when the Dallas business-development manager and her husband recently split the tab with another couple at an Italian restaurant, and their friends neglected to leave a tip, she was left wondering about the whole system.

“As we left the restaurant and were getting in our car, the owner of the restaurant came running out to us and wanted to know why we didn’t like the dinner,” she remembers.

Why the question? Because Morris and her husband put down only a 10% tip – an amount equal to their share of a customary restaurant tip. “At first, we were embarrassed that the owner had to chase us down,” she says. “But as we thought more about it we really were outraged he had the nerve to ask.”

The very same thing happened to me awhile back at a Greek restaurant in Chicago. After a delicious meal of souvlaki, followed by what was quite possibly the best baklava this side of Athens, our group of five pooled its cash and handed it to the waiter. As we got up to leave, an angry-looking owner – and I mean angry in a Zeus-raining-lightning-bolts-on-the-mortals kind of way – blocked our way to the exit.

“The tip,” he thundered, “is not adequate.”

Let me make a few disclaimers before I go any further. I’ve never worked as a waiter, although I don’t think that disqualifies me from writing about tipping any more than, say, a reporter without a criminal record covering prisons, or a sportscaster who’s never played professional football commenting on the NFL. So to those of you who think the only person who can write about tipping is a waiter – talk to the hand.

I also have a somewhat unique perspective on tips. I grew up in Europe, where tipping customs are somewhat different than they are stateside. And my grandfather – whose surname, Eliopolous, was anglicized to Elliott in the 1920s when he arrived at Ellis Island from Greece – ran a restaurant in Charlotte, N.C., for decades. (Although I didn’t know my grandfather very well, it’s conceivable that he might have pulled the whole Zeus routine with a lousy tipper, come to think of it.)

Given all that, I believe the tipping system in North America is seriously flawed. It exploits service personnel such as waiters, baggage handlers and hotel staff, paying them substandard wages but relying on the generosity – or guilt – of the people they serve to make up for the shortfall in their salary. I would much prefer raising prices to cover the increase in pay or incorporating a mandatory gratuity into the final price, as they do in Europe.

But the system is what it is, and as travelers we have to work within it. So here are five tipping tips I’ve picked up while on the road:

Unless the service is utterly lacking, always tip something. The fact is, an overwhelming majority of the service staff in the United States who serve you food, bring you drinks, make your hotel bed and clean your room depend on your tips. It’s important to be aware of the economics of tipping. Anyone who tells you that a gratuity is supposed to be just a reward for good service is living in la-la land. It isn’t, of course. You’re talking about depriving these service workers of their income when you withhold a tip, so do it only when they really deserve nothing. I only refuse to tip when things go catastrophically wrong – terrible service, a long wait, inedible food, and a “don’t-care-if-you-ever-come-back” attitude.

That’s what a lot of travelers do, too. Tanja Rieck says she has a sliding scale for tipping. “We tip 20% for exceptional service, 15% for good service, 10% for average service and at times we have not tipped at all or very low – 1% to 5% – for poor service,” says the Redwood City, Calif., social worker. That’s fine with her husband, who works in the service industry and happens to also rely on tips for a living.

Know how much to tip. I have friends who carry little cards with pre-calculated tip amounts on them. I think that’s overdoing it. I think a better idea is for a restaurant to print a “suggested gratuity” on the receipt. How much do I tip the van driver? I don’t have a clue. It never hurts to ask. My rule of thumb is 20/1 – 20% of the bill or $1 for every bag you’re helped with in a hotel or at the airport.

I turned to Matt Turner for his tipping ideas. He ought to know about tipping, since he’s an accomplished traveler and works in the tourism industry handling media relations for the state of West Virginia. He says extraordinary meal service merits up to a 30% tip. An enjoyable cab ride? $3 to $15, depending on the length. Good service from a porter? $5 to $15, if you have a lot of luggage. “A good concierge recommendation can get $10 or more if you end up with the best seats in the house for second-balcony prices,” he says.

Know when not to tip. There are some service personnel whose forward-looking employers already take good care of them. Some hotel housekeepers, for example, are unionized and make more money than the average travel writer. They’re adequately compensated and don’t need or even expect a tip. And, on the other hand, there are some workers who do expect a tip, but shouldn’t.

That’s what happened when Kepi Peterson’s luggage was delayed on a recent trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C. “We made arrangements for our bags to be delivered to us that same night to my in-laws, who lived about 45 minutes from the airport,” recalls the Mesa, Ariz., bookkeeper. “I could see from the document I had to sign that the delivery man was making $55 from the airline for this delivery. I didn’t feel that I should have to tip him for a service I would not have needed if my luggage had arrived at the airport with me.”

Be sensitive to local customs and practices. Always ask whether a tip is expected or if it’s included in the price of your meal. There are destinations where waving a few dollars in a waiter’s face might be more of an insult than a bonus, especially if you’re an American. In some hotels (the all-inclusive ones, for instance), there’s a no-tipping policy; in others, the gratuity is added to your bill “for your convenience” – which is great, as long as you know that it’s being added.

Elisabeth Datta of South Woodslee, Ontario, Canada, traveled to New Zealand last November, and was surprised when people turned down her money. “Even the shuttle driver would not take a tip,” she remembers.

Appearances are important; tip accordingly. If you’re at a business lunch or on a business trip, you shouldn’t only be concerned with what the porter or waiter thinks of you – worry about what your clients or your boss thinks, too. What will a prospective customer think of you if you don’t offer a gratuity? Fortunately, in an age of credit cards, you can conceal the amount on your bill. It isn’t so easy when you’re handing greenbacks to a concierge. If you leave your colleagues with the impression you’re a cheapskate, it could affect your business.

As if that’s not enough, there are other rules that apply to the business lunch. “If you are holding a meeting or an interview in a restaurant and plan to stay more than an hour, then you should inform and tip the server at least $5 per hour,” says Chiquita Leak, president of a security company in Las Vegas. “This usually guarantees that she won’t keep disturbing you and will provide you with prompt service.”

OK, I have a confession to make. This is one of those columns where I agree with the tipping tips in theory – well, they are my tips – but I don’t necessarily follow them all the time.

Why? Maybe I’m a tightwad.

Then again, maybe I agree with people like Raul Zambrana, a flight attendant based in Frankfurt, Germany, who reminds me that in Deutschland, waiters get full benefits and six weeks of vacation. (“There should be no tipping,” he told me. “There should be a base salary.”)

But I am, by my own admission, a cautious and conservative tipper. And I’m also no mathematician, so let’s just say I don’t always calculate 20% accurately. I’ll never forget the time I tipped a van driver $20 when I meant to give him $2. Didn’t I learn about decimal points in grade school?

So you probably won’t be surprised that in the end, I stepped around Zeus and fled that Greek restaurant I talked about earlier. Lucky for me, he didn’t follow. I suspect you might find my name on a Web site like Bitterwaitress.com – a hilarious online database of restaurant patrons who under tip. Probably serves me right for not taking my own advice.

Christopher Elliott is the author of Scammed: How to Save Your Money and Find Better Service in a World of Schemes, Swindles, and Shady Deals. Critics have called it “eye-opening” and “inspiring” — it’ll “grab your attention and won’t let go.” Order your copy now on Amazon, Barnes & Noble or iTunes.

11 comments

  • Howard Turner

    Yes, you ARE a tightwad! Until things change for the wait staff, the customary tip these days is between 15% to 20% of the bill, with the average being 18%. If you can’t tip, don’t eat out!!! Waiters have to pay out of their tips a certain percentage to the bus boy (or girl), the bartender, and sometimes even the hosting/seating staff! Unless the food or service is really bad, you should pay the average tip. And if the service and/or food is that bad that you feel you must pay less than the average tip, then you really need to let the manager know your dining experience was less than average! Yes, unless you walk the walk, you can’t talk the talk!
    So, Ms. Morris, either don’t go out to eat with those stingy friends of yours anymore, or try taking a job waiting tables. You’ll see just how hard and demanding the job really is! I am fortunately practitcing as a registered nurse now, and don’t have to rely on tips. But the days I had to work paying my way through college as a waiter, was very tough! Was peeves me is when you are expected to tip the barrister at Starbucks for making you a cup of coffee! That is yet another story…..

  • Demitri

    What am I tipping for, the service or the value of the meal? I go to a restaurant order a $10 meal, the wait person takes my order brings my meal serves my needs. I leave a $1.50 tip. The person at the table next to me orders a $60 meal the wait person takes the order serves the customer and leaves a $9 tip.Same service same amount of work. Is that fair?

  • Drew

    You know…
    It’s called a gratuity for a reason… It should _not_ be required… (Before you call me a cheapskate, I _do_ tip. I tip extremely well for good service (20-25%).) That being said, I think the service industry is a sham that gets by with paying substandard wages….

    I actually went to a buffet restaurant not too long ago. My normal tip there is $1 per person in my party to account for filling drinks and the like. I got my credit card receipt, and it had “suggested tip amounts” of 25%, 30%, and 35%! Like I’m going to tip $7 per person at a buffet where I’ve done most of the work?

    I will also admit that I’ve been run down outside of a restaurant for leaving a lackluster tip. We were at a restaurant in Santa Cruz, CA for leaving a $5 tip on a $75 check. When the server came out chasing us down, we politely informed her that we had had to get our own drinks not once or twice, but _every_ single time that night, and that we’d complained to the manager that our food was cold by the time the server had gotten it to us. We informed her that she was lucky that she’d gotten $5….

    Tipping should _not_ be expected.
    I go to a restaurant, I _expect_ service.
    Do you tip the cable company for providing your programming to you? No.
    Do you tip the mailman for bringing you your mail? No.
    Why should you tip for service that you are _paying_ for already? You shouldn’t have to….

  • Tony

    As a person working in a retail clothing store, I have no sympathy for the restaurant industry. I may spend 30 minutes with one person, running back and forth, presenting differect items, making suggestions, and even having to become physical with the customer, in order to give proper service…and I never get a tip! Like many, I simple work for an hourly salary. Wouldn’t it be nice if that restaurant server that I’m helping, gave me a 15% tip. If you want tips, then be fair – or better yet, do away with them.

  • Timorhy

    up to 10% for buffet lines
    15-20% for Good service
    Tips based on pre-tax total of food and beverage
    Inattentive or sullen waitstaff get nothing other than a comment to the manager on our way out the door

  • BriCo

    Tipping is and has always been a means to show appreciation for service. The fact that some restaurants pay substandard wages is not my problem – it’s the employees’; it is not my duty to subsidize the minimum wage. Having said that, I will quickly add that I DO customarily tip (15%) if the service is reasonable. But I get terribly irked when people say it’s my job to make up for poor wages. THAT is the job of the employee/employer.

  • Kathy

    In most of Michigan servers earn $2.65 an hour without benefits generally. So to tip 10% is a joke. If any aspect of your dining experience is poor GET A MANAGER! That is why they are in the house. Every person in the restaurant knows that the guest represents profit and the staff represents overhead. Yet people will crucify the waitstaff without knowing the whole story about their dining experience. GET A MANAGER! But don’t forget the waitstaff. I have been a serve and a manager. There are good + bad serveers + managers, clearly. However, there are LOTS + LOTS of tightwads and cheapies who try to skate on their tips in the guise of dining with a group. When there is not a tip baked into the bill be sure your server get YOUR tip.

  • charles

    i agree that tips should only be paid to reward good, prompt service. on the other hand some industries such as the cruise industry pay employees slave wages. my most upsetting tip event occurred at the end of a cruise. i left a tip envelopes on the dining room table for our waiter and busboy. after arriving home, i was informed by a relative that a friend that was cruising with us, removed most of the money from our tip envelope because he thought we were making him look cheap due to the difference in tips.

  • Lynne

    Group stiffing is common when bills are being split multiple ways. It is called free-riding. Often people figure that they don’t have to tip because someone else is tipping. It’s like having multiple roommates…housecleaning chores often go undone because there is simply no accountability–especially when people are just slapping their money into a pile for the table. And the more people in attendance, the more freeriding occurs. Now, if you have one dinner partner, or one roommate, it’s pretty obvious who isn’t pulling their weight.

    One comment about tipping from this waitress:
    I still have to tip out the bartenders according to my sales regardless of what tips I collected during a shift. And in other establishments I’ve worked–you also have to tip out the bus boys and the hostesses in addition to the bar staff. So simply, if you leave me a crap ass tip, it becomes even more crap ass when I have to turn around and share it–plus pay taxes on my sales when the IRS assumes that I am making a certain amount on tips. And trust me–if I don’t turn around and tip out the bar even if I get stiffed— my life is made miserable. That is why stiffing doesn’t go unnoticed.

    Thanks for your continued writing to stimulate awareness of such subjects. And happy holidays!

    XOXOXOX

    Lynne Warnicke in Honolulu, Hawaii
    Love2snorkel@aol.com

  • Dean

    The person who split the check needs some training in simple math… From the explanation it appears that she split the 20% tip and paid her share (10%). However, if the other person did the same thing, the total tip would only be 10%.

    Assume a $200 dinner. With no split and a 20% tip the wait staff would receive $40. Split the cost into two $100 shares with each person giving a 10% tip, the wait staff would only receive $20…

  • Chick

    I always try to leave a good tip for good service. I’ve also gone to the manager for service that was so substandard, it was pitiful.

    I would like to tell servers something, however: just because I rarely order alcohol doesn’t mean I’m not a good tipper. I tip very generously for good service. However, when you ignore me because I’m not drinking, and you spend all your time with the cutie pies at the next table who are guzzling margaritas, you’d better expect to get a penny for a tip. It’s happened to me before. I know this is the reason because my hubby was a waiter for years and told me he’s known a lot of servers who gave the best service to the people who were drinking alcohol, because with the larger bill, they’d get a bigger tip.

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