We tip ok.
We give 15%-18% for adequate service, 20% if the server at least gave a smile and refilled our drinks once, and 25 - 30% for excellent service.
However, I have no problems leaving 0% for the surly server that prefers to chat with the hostess while I am trying to track him/her down to get a drink, find our food or get the bill.
TIPS stands for To Insure Prompt Service. If I have to track a server down a couple of times, they are not getting a tip.
While there are plenty of cheap patrons out there, and I feel for the hard working servers, there are also as many servers who feel that a tip is their right and they should get it no matter how they treat the customer. No service, no tip from this patron.
In many states servers do not make minimum wage from the restaurant. I make $3.33 an hour. I then have to declare 10% of my total sales as tips for income purposes. I have to tip out the bar tender 2% of my total sales, even if the only drink I sold all night was a beer, and if we have a busser they get 2% of my total sales. I have no problem with tipping 10% for bad service, but I do have a problem with leaving no tip since they are declaring a percentage of that sale for tax purposes. If there is a problem I talk to the manager, which is much more effective than stiffing them. If somebody stiffs or undertips me, I don't know if it's because of bad service or because they don't have the money.
$2-$3 an hour is all you get paid? How do the owners get a way with this? Is this industry standard in the US? I am just wondering why the restaurant owners do not just pay more per hour - my 16 year old DD makes $8.25/hour + holiday pay + tips (which usually equals out to another $5/hr) because she just works in a diner.
Maybe a lot of non-US citizens do not realize how little the workers are paid.
This is standard for my state. Every restaurant I have worked in I did not make a minimum wage base salary. I figured out my salary from the last night I served, and it was 8.58 an hour after I tipped out the bar. I only get schedueld to serve two nights a week, and support a third. As I mentioned on another thread, the past three times I worked support I was turned away within less than ten minutes, I spent more money on gas going in than I made for the whole three minutes I was on the clock. When I do serve, I am cut from the floor sometimes within an hour or two of arriving because we are slow during the summer (we are a university town). I rarely work more than four hours, so many times I'm lucky to be able to afford gas and food. I would never be able to pay my rent and tuition if this were my only source of income.
There is a minimum wage, state and federal but for positions that are customarily tipped, the wages are significantly lower. DS's girlfriend goes to school full time and works part time as a waitress. She brings home $150 to $300 per night, depending upon which night and how busy they are.
I want to work where she does! Due to the slowness now that the university is out, I'm consistently making about $20 a day, and I'm doing extra side work because not as many servers are being scheduled.
This is the first time I have ever heard someone say not tipping is immoral. I have never had a discussion about morality that involved tipping.
There are a lot of different reason people tip or not tip.
Not tipping (to me) is immoral. As a server, I declare a portion of your sale as income to the IRS and am taxed on that. I worked with many single moms in my time as a server, and they could barely afford to feed and clothe their children. We always try to give good service, but there's a lot that goes on behind the scenes that guests don't see.
Recent post brought up a pet peeve, waitstaff pooling tips. So I get a great server, tip well, and the bad server gets a cut of that? Not cool. Or I get a bad server, and tip accordingly, as in $0.02, and the good server suffers as well? Not cool either.
How about I give a VOLUNTARY gratuity to the person who actually earns it. Cool?
'
I have never worked in a restaurant that pooled tips for servers. We do a tip out to the bar and bussers, but my tips do not go to any server but me.
I am grateful for a small tip vs. not tip, but seeing as I just had to give the bar 2% of your total sale as a tip out, and declare 10% to the IRS so they can tax me on it, I am always disappointed by a small tip. I take it very personally. I had a table of two the other night. I was giving them attention without being obtrusive. The man was drinking a lot, and I kept refilling his glass (we are trained not to get it less than half full). When I did so I tried to be unobtrusive so as not to bother them, and he told me to quit refilling his glass. I cleaned their plates in a timely manner, etc. etc. I was as polite as could be. On the way out they told me to have a good evening, and I assumed they were happy with their service. I got less than $2 on a $30.00 bill. I worked my butt off for that table and was somewhat offended. I had to declare $3 in tips to the IRS for that table, so I am being taxed for money from that sale that I never received. This is one of the reasons I am leaving my job (not the only). I can't afford it with how slow it is and how little some of my guests tip.
I don't mind tiping if I get good service, and will generally be in the 15 to 20 percent range. I do however hate that resturants will automatically add around 18% to your bill as a tip if you have more than a few people in your party. The tip is supposed to be payment for a job well done, and should never be guarenteed.
The tip should be expected because I am taxed on the amount the government perceives I will earn from your table- whether I do or not. The reason we do this is because despite the fact that it takes much more work to wait on one big table than several small tables, they frequently will tip LESS. The restaurant has to make it worth the server's time and energy to serve that large table. I have personal experience with this:
I worked at a Dennys and the daycare center where the owner's daughter went brought in 30 kids for ice cream sundaes. My section was closed early and I had no other tables so I could concentrate on them. Serving 30 kids plus staff and parents was tiring and time consuming. The owner had to pay me out of the restaurant's profits for that day because they pretty much stiffed me on the tip.