What's the going rate for tipping these days? I usually tip the bellhop who takes our bags (and us) to our room. I also leave a tip at the end of the stay for housekeeping. How much is acceptable? We're staying at the Polynesian for 7 days.
This is something that started about 10-15 years ago and that I don't really get. Tipping housekeeping at motels/hotels. Started about the same time that valet became 'standard' everywhere.
I'm not against valet for a hotel or a high-end restaurant. I'm not really against it at a Mall if they can make money at it. It seems dumb to pay someone to park my car at the mall, though. At some restaurants I've been do they do valet and they literally drive it 20ft. It's 'complimentary' but you're a jerk if you don't tip (or, at least, that's what I think the game is - bilking you and others out of a couple of bucks here or there for supposed service).
At a sit-down restaurant, I get it. Your bill is basically a little cheaper because the wait-staff is getting paid less but working for tips. At Subway (yep - I've seen tip-jars there, too) I don't see where I need to pay you extra for making a sandwich that you're being paid to make in the first place. I sort of feel the same way about housekeeping. To my knowledge, they aren't paid less like wait-staff and are expected to make it up in tips. They are paid what they are paid.
I just think it's a con. It's like the guys who approach you and a date with a bunch of roses when you're trying to get to a game or a show or something. They're betting that you won't want to look like a jerk by not buying a rose from them for your girlfriend. I think it's a great con, but it's still just a con.
One other thing on tipping: Whenever they force gratuity on me, I never leave anything extra. Normally they'd be getting more out of me, tip-wise, if they didn't force it. When you force it, though, the tipping game is off.
This is something that started about 10-15 years ago and that I don't really get. Tipping housekeeping at motels/hotels. Started about the same time that valet became 'standard' everywhere.
I'm not against valet for a hotel or a high-end restaurant. I'm not really against it at a Mall if they can make money at it. It seems dumb to pay someone to park my car at the mall, though. At some restaurants I've been do they do valet and they literally drive it 20ft. It's 'complimentary' but you're a jerk if you don't tip (or, at least, that's what I think the game is - bilking you and others out of a couple of bucks here or there for supposed service).
At a sit-down restaurant, I get it. Your bill is basically a little cheaper because the wait-staff is getting paid less but working for tips. At Subway (yep - I've seen tip-jars there, too) I don't see where I need to pay you extra for making a sandwich that you're being paid to make in the first place. I sort of feel the same way about housekeeping. To my knowledge, they aren't paid less like wait-staff and are expected to make it up in tips. They are paid what they are paid.
I just think it's a con. It's like the guys who approach you and a date with a bunch of roses when you're trying to get to a game or a show or something. They're betting that you won't want to look like a jerk by not buying a rose from them for your girlfriend. I think it's a great con, but it's still just a con.
One other thing on tipping: Whenever they force gratuity on me, I never leave anything extra. Normally they'd be getting more out of me, tip-wise, if they didn't force it. When you force it, though, the tipping game is off.
Other people to tip are the valet, we do $2 on drop off and $2 on pick up
Have a great trip.
Brad -- I certainly respect your point of view, and, yeah, I get a little tired of the "tips" jars at places like Dunkin' Donuts, etc. etc.
I do not know -- does anyone out there know? -- if the pay scale for hotel housekeepers assumes some percentage of tips as part of their salary. And to be 100% honest, we do not tip at every hotel we ever stay at.
But at WDW, we always tip. You can laugh at me for being overly sentimental, or for being "conned," even. But there we are, spending an ungodly amount of money for our vacation, and I see the women (I've just never happened to see a male) who push the carts through the halls and clean the rooms, and I see the efforts these women go through to make our room special for us, and I think -- I can sure as he** afford to tip for the service I'm getting and share some of the magic, if you will, back with the people working the low-paying jobs who make my day better. I probably haven't expressed that very well, but that's why we tip at WDW.
That's kind of my deal. If you're just doing your job and your job is paying you to do that job, I just don't see the need to tip (Dunkin Donuts, Subway, etc.). If you're going out of your way to see that I'm happy, it's another story.
I don't tip out of guilt and it's pretty easy to get caught up in that. To me it's not a "I'm so sorry your life sucks"-sort of thing but more of a, "Wow - you really took care of me - this is my way of saying thank you. You did a good job." It seems more respectful that way.
I also don't keep a tip-jar on my desk. Although...![]()
If you don't want to tip valets, then self park--no one is bilking anyone, it's a choice that you can make for yourself.
As for the rose vendors, it's no different than the cigarette girls of the 1950's and 1960's--heck I still saw them in a few places into the early 1990's. If you aren't interested, say "no thanks" and they will move on.