Because this link is to CNN.com, quoting Emily Post, Miss Manner's competition...
http://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/tipping/
I was looking at this one also...
http://www.itipping.com/tip-guide-restaurant.htm
and for buffets it says nothing necessary for fast food (When's the last time anyone saw a KFC buffet????) so does that mean for the places where you pull your own cup out of a cafeteria-style cart and fill your own drink? $1-2pp for if they bring you drinks and check on you, and up to 20% for a "high-end hotel buffet brunch"-- so maybe that's where CP falls????
I'm still going to book my parents separately (so we're 4 and 2) and tip what feels right based on the service we get that day (not saying it WON'T be 18% or better... I once tipped 100%... but there was a reason, and it wasn't a $300 buffet...)
Im not going to lie here, I will never, under any circumstances pay a 20% tip on a meal in Disney. We ate at CM once and our bill was $170. It was a buffet. I don't think our waitress deserved $34 for bring us a few drinks for one hour. I did tip her $20 but not because I wanted to, I just felt "pressured". It wont be that way for me next time. Money is tighter.
If I'm at a buffet and am paying to eat and fix my own plate, that waiter/waitress will get between 5% and 10% from me. Just how it is. I understand they need money too, but so do I. I think that amount is VERY fair for someone walks by and see's your glass empty then brings a pitcher back to fill it.
If Im at a restaurant where I am totally waited on and catered to, its a whole other story of course. They are working for me at that point and deserve more.
Call me a tight wad, flame me, but Im just not going to pay someone an inflated tip "just because society tells me to".
My money comes in too hard for others to tell me how to spend it.
Because this link is to CNN.com, quoting Emily Post, Miss Manner's competition...
http://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/tipping/
I was looking at this one also...
http://www.itipping.com/tip-guide-restaurant.htm
and for buffets it says nothing necessary for fast food (When's the last time anyone saw a KFC buffet????) so does that mean for the places where you pull your own cup out of a cafeteria-style cart and fill your own drink? $1-2pp for if they bring you drinks and check on you, and up to 20% for a "high-end hotel buffet brunch"-- so maybe that's where CP falls????
I'm still going to book my parents separately (so we're 4 and 2) and tip what feels right based on the service we get that day (not saying it WON'T be 18% or better... I once tipped 100%... but there was a reason, and it wasn't a $300 buffet...)
Im not going to lie here, I will never, under any circumstances pay a 20% tip on a meal in Disney. We ate at CM once and our bill was $170. It was a buffet. I don't think our waitress deserved $34 for bring us a few drinks for one hour. I did tip her $20 but not because I wanted to, I just felt "pressured". It wont be that way for me next time. Money is tighter.
If I'm at a buffet and am paying to eat and fix my own plate, that waiter/waitress will get between 5% and 10% from me. Just how it is. I understand they need money too, but so do I. I think that amount is VERY fair for someone walks by and see's your glass empty then brings a pitcher back to fill it.
If Im at a restaurant where I am totally waited on and catered to, its a whole other story of course. They are working for me at that point and deserve more.
Call me a tight wad, flame me, but Im just not going to pay someone an inflated tip "just because society tells me to".
My money comes in too hard for others to tell me how to spend it.
If you cannot afford a proper tip then you cannot afford to eat there. Find a place you can afford.
(I didn't know everything was all together on one plate so we had to ask for a plate without meat for the vegetarian in the group).
I thought Crystal palace is a Buffet? In fact that's the buffet I'm planning on going to. Is it TS?
Sure,, they don't bring out your food, but they bus tables a lot more than at a regular restaurant.
Anybody know if the servers at Disney make the standard $7.35/hr or do they get the $2.12 or whatever that servers in normal restaurants get? Just curious...
So in Florida, wait staff gets less than minimum wage? That's ridiculous. In my state wait staff gets minimum wage, so it doesn't come down to customers to determine the actual wage. A tip is a tip, not required to get the server up to a decent wage.
My waitress seats us and brings us drinks. That is not deserving of a $28 tip for a few minutes work. Sorry.
If the same waitress seated us, brought our drinks, asked how we wanted our steaks cooked, asked what kinds of dressings we wanted for our salads, brought us fresh bread when we ran out, brought our food and made sure it was hot and presentable, asked if we wanted coffee or dessert, cleared our table, does all this in a timely manner, etc that is different.
Im not going to lie here, I will never, under any circumstances pay a 20% tip on a meal in Disney. We ate at CM once and our bill was $170. It was a buffet. I don't think our waitress deserved $34 for bring us a few drinks for one hour. I did tip her $20 but not because I wanted to, I just felt "pressured". It wont be that way for me next time. Money is tighter.
If I'm at a buffet and am paying to eat and fix my own plate, that waiter/waitress will get between 5% and 10% from me. Just how it is. I understand they need money too, but so do I. I think that amount is VERY fair for someone walks by and see's your glass empty then brings a pitcher back to fill it.
If Im at a restaurant where I am totally waited on and catered to, its a whole other story of course. They are working for me at that point and deserve more.
Call me a tight wad, flame me, but Im just not going to pay someone an inflated tip "just because society tells me to".
My money comes in too hard for others to tell me how to spend it.
That must have been one heck of a messy, unmagical dining experience! You had dDisneylicious said:Take a Disney buffet for example. Lets round it off at $35 each for 4 people. Thats $140 before tax. My waitress seats us and brings us drinks. That is not deserving of a $28 tip for a few minutes work. Sorry.
For the record, nobody at Walt Disney World is telling you how much to tip unless (a) you're using your Tables in Wonderland discount or (b) your party consists of six or more people. The percentages on your WDW restaurant check are suggestions calculated for the guest's convenience.
Because this link is to CNN.com, quoting Emily Post, Miss Manner's competition...
http://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/tipping/
I was looking at this one also...
http://www.itipping.com/tip-guide-restaurant.htm
and for buffets it says nothing necessary for fast food (When's the last time anyone saw a KFC buffet????) so does that mean for the places where you pull your own cup out of a cafeteria-style cart and fill your own drink? $1-2pp for if they bring you drinks and check on you, and up to 20% for a "high-end hotel buffet brunch"-- so maybe that's where CP falls????
I'm still going to book my parents separately (so we're 4 and 2) and tip what feels right based on the service we get that day (not saying it WON'T be 18% or better... I once tipped 100%... but there was a reason, and it wasn't a $300 buffet...)
Anybody know if the servers at Disney make the standard $7.35/hr or do they get the $2.12 or whatever that servers in normal restaurants get? Just curious...
And then someone mentioned that for parties of 6 or more, at Disney, 18% is automatically added *even for the buffets*. Is that right????Exactly what would they be doing at our dinner buffet to warrant a $54 tip???? (especially considering we'll be there less than an hour, so that works out to a $1+/minute surcharge...)
But one the majority of states - about 80% - that's not the case. Minimum wage for wait staff is between $2 and $4.50 or so.So in Florida, wait staff gets less than minimum wage? That's ridiculous. In my state wait staff gets minimum wage, so it doesn't come down to customers to determine the actual wage.
Interesting. Entry level, sure. Untrained? Really? Go walk into your local buffet restaurant, dress or jewelry shop, or big box store and start workingA tip is a tip, not required to get the server up to a decent wage. Disney charges enough to pay their employees fairly. Here I tip very minimally at buffets, since they are serving me no more than the typical retail clerk, who I do not tip at all. Both of those jobs are untrained, entry level positions, so I don't see why one is more entitled to money above minimum wage than the other.
I've never known a bartender to be paid less than minimum wage; experienced/good ones make more. Tips are just gravy.And, yes, I've worked at a bartender before, but it was in a very small town where people did not feel pressured to tip a certain percentage. Tips were all over the board, from nonexistent to excessive, and I did not vary my service depending on whether people tipped.
At a TS restaurant, I tip around 20%, rarely dependent on service quality. I just do it. I hate buffets, so I only go if someone else chooses the restaurant. I did not schedule any buffets into our Disney visit, so fortunately it will be a non issue there.
Tipping a penny is silly. Complaining about bad service isn't rude or rotten. It's smart. Doing it while you're experiencing the bad service - instead of waiting until the end of the meal or the check comes - is the smartest move of all. Why suffer in silence in thehope of maybe getting something knocked off your bill or not having to tip, when instead you can get the problem fixed on the spot??????We tip according to the level of service. Buffet restraunts will get a little less than a sit down. But it all depends on the level of service. We have tipped a penny for bad service. We read somewhere to tip at least that so that they know that you tip.But now I am just rude/rotten enough to complain about bad service. Thankfully, we have not been in that situation
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That doesn't sound any more ethical than the other poster having to claim hours that she didn't work. You want me to check with someone I know who owns a pizza/sub shop?Wait staff/pizza delievery people sometimes are paid less than min wage. They are paid wait staff min and it is assumed that they will recieve enough tips to make it up to min wage. They also have to declare said tips accordinglyBeen there in college, and not going back if I can help it
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