
I have to laugh about this one too. I remember when 10% was the standard. Boy, was THAT easy math to do.
Then, at some point, it morphed into 10-15%. We scratched our collective heads and asked, "When did that happen? Who decided that?" But we went along with it. Those were my dating days, so what did I care? LOL! The guys were paying. I just checked to make sure they paid enough and weren't cheap or stiffing the waitstaff.
Then, several years ago, we began to hear murmurs of 15-20%. I have to be honest. I don't know WHERE that came from. It's as if a secret meeting was held, a vote was taken, and all of a sudden that was the party line that no one would deviate from. Like I'd been in a coma and missed a cultural shift......Only it seemed to happen virtually overnight. Does anyone else remember it this way?
So we have worked our way upwards from 15-20%, but I swear I am not going above that as a standard tip. Now I have, on occasion, tipped more for very good service. Or if we come in for dessert only, I tend to tip a higher amount. Things like that. But if I hear that it's morphed into 20-25%, I'm feigning deafness.
Tipping is so ingrained in our culture, that even when we visit countries where you do not tip, we feel awkward if we do not at least leave a dollar or so on the table. We visited Russia and stayed in St. Petersburg for a week. Each hotel floor had a small cafe and we'd go there for breakfast every morning. For $10-12, we could get:
Me: Tea, bottled water, smoked salmon on bread, caviar
DH: Tea, bottled water, open faced sandwich, pastry
You went up to the counter and selected what you wanted, but the women got your tea and heated any food items you wanted. They would also refill your teapot. No one left a ruble on the table for them. We left the equivalent of a dollar or so on the first day. On the second day, when we came in, they knew us on sight and waited on us speedy quick. We even got smiles, which you don't get easily in Russia from complete strangers. I thought, "It's only a dollar to us, but no one else is leaving it." And those women made $40 a month at most. After a week of us, they had $7. They would have jumped for joy at 15-20% per table. Heck, they would have done cartwheels for the old standard of 10% per table. It was a pleasure to tip them. But we had to be careful not to overtip, because there's the danger of looking like the sterotypical American flaunting your wealth. (Not that we're wealthy by US standards.......But in all honesty, comparatively speaking, we were.)
I guess it's all in the perspective.