Just wondering if you tip Mousekeeping.
If not, why?
Housekeeping is not a tipping position.

Just wondering if you tip Mousekeeping.
If not, why?

And don't forget my favorite: The custodians in the theme parks who get to clean up other people's poo in the hot and sticky rest rooms in the middle of the humid Florida summer.As far as it being a job I would never want to do, I personally would rather do housekeeping than daycare, teaching, or direct sales, so I do not necessarily think that is such a good yardstick to measure whether someone deserves a tip or not.

For the person who asked about Florida's minimum wage, it is $6.79 for regular employees and $3.77 for tipped employees.
To answer the original question, no, I do not tip housekeeping. If someone else wants to they can, it doesn't bother me but I personally don't feel the need to.
I do like to tip to thank them for a job well done, and I liked the idea someone suggested of making envelopes. I will try that this summer and see if that works.I am like you. I leave a tip. I try to find out who will be cleaning by leaving a note the first day asking what days that particular Mousekeeper will be working. Sometimes I get excellent service sometimes not. "Paying it forward" can never be a bad thing. Of course I come from a family who tip the servers at our local Sonic fast food resturant and I tip the young teenage boys who carry my groceries out at the grocery store. I will not however be tipping the stroller rental booth people.I always tip. I do consider it a tipped position. And yes I know Disney's stance is that its not as is the rest of the thoughtful set who makes up the rules and regs of the hospitality industry. But my policy is that housekeepers are a tipped position. I don't get irritated at people who don't but for me personally, not tipping is just not an option. I tip every morning, knowing I have no idea if I will get stellar service or lousy service. I have gotten both, almost always stellar service. I just figure if I tip $5 and don't get a towel animal, I'll probably live.
And no I do not tip a retail clerk. If she cleaned my toilet, changed my sheets and vacumed up my messy kids' cracker crumbs I would. She rings my sale up, hands it to me and I am gone. I guess I feel more of a personal relationship to a housekeeper.
I see both sides, and see that both sides of the argument are valid.

Not sure where you can find info on tipped positions...but
normally tipped positions are those where the pay is minimum wage, or lower,...ie. valet parkers, bell persons. Housekeeping at WDW is not in that
category...they make much more. I don't think they do it anymore, but
in the past Disney listed tipped positions in the literature guests recvd. when checking in---housekeeping wasn't on the list.

Wow... $6.79 / hour...a whole $14,000 per year!!!
Please be so kind to reach in your pocket and toss a couple of bucks on the dresser for these people who provide you a personal service....Princess.
Funny how? Typically, most system trend towards a stable point. After a certain period of time, unless you markedly change the population from which you're gathering your data, the data you gather shouldn't vary from the data gathered previously.
Not smart enough for you Bicker!
Back when there were like 10 votes, it was 68%, at 50 votes, 68%, just has stayed that way all along...when I have seen it anyway. I have watched others fluctuate at least a little bit...maybe go to 63%, then up to 67%, etc. But to almost never change, I found it interesting!Is this really a "personal" service though? Anymore than any other job in Disney that others do for us...that make the same money and don't get tipped? Someone just said something about the custodians? Really, their job is so much worse than a housekeepers IMO! Their job is to clean up nothing but garbage and other nasty things all day long. The custodians may be paid better than the maids. They are at Six Flags and Schlitterbahn, anyway.NEVER tipped! Would you even consider tipping them? I have tipped the custodians when they do something for me personally. At Six Flags, my husband threw up on the pavement after his ride on a big rollercoaster. The custodian came right away and cleaned it u, and I tipped him $10. That was pretty personal service in my opinion.Why not?