daisy112878 said:
If any they only get $5/person for a tip that's just laughable in my opinion.
webray said:
We are with you daisy, people who go to Palo and don't tip above the service charge or tip $5 is definately a joke.
Okay, let's play the "what would this meal cost and what would the tip be" game.
If I go to a good hotel restaurant such as Citrico's at the Grand Floridian, the per-person, food-only cost is likely to be around $50 ($8 appetizer + $8 salad + $26 entree + $8 dessert). At 20%, the per-person tip on the food would be $10.
If only $5 of the $10 Palo fee goes toward gratuities, then that would mean a guest would need to add $5 to bring the tip up to $10, or, if the guest adds $10, the tip would total $15, which would be equivalent to 30%.
There's an 15% auto-gratuity on beverages such as bottled water, wine, other alcohol. and specialty coffees. A guest may want to add to that gratuity to bring the percentage to 20% or more.
Someone might want to challenge my premise that a 4-course dinner at Palo is comparable to a $50, 4-course dinner at a good hotel restaurant. The ingredients, preparation, and presentation at Palo are in the same class as a good hotel restaurant -- much better than dinner house chains, but not in the same class as true fine-dining restaurants. I guess if someone orders 3 entrees and 4 desserts, then my premise would not apply. But for a typical 4-course meal at Palo, I think $50 is about right.
So, if a couple spends $50 on wine and bottled water and the couple leaves an extra $5 per person ($10 total), the service staff would end up with a gratuity of $27.50 ($10 from Palo fee + $10 extra + $7.50 auto-gratuity).
I think we tipped an extra $10 per person, and we spent about $50 on wine and bottled water. So the service staff ended up with a gratuity of around $37.50 from us.
Yes, we tipped more than $5 per person -- but I wouldn't call $5 "laughable" or "a joke."