Housekeeping is not a tipped position at WDW.
We don't tip at hotels. As I always say when this topic comes up, I'd never heard of tipping housekeeping at any hotel (not just Disney) before the Dis.![]()
Tipping housekeeping at hotels is very, very common. That said, I don't do it myself.
Hmmm.
I've noticed those of you who are saying $5 a day for housekeeping are families of 4. It will just be my DS(5) and myself. DO I just leave $2 a day?? That seems a little ridiculous! What does everyone think?
If it's just my husband and me, I'll usually leave $3.
In other locations besides Disney, if we're going to be staying in a hotel for more than a night or two, or if I feel like we've left a lot of stuff to clean up, moved things around, etc., I will leave a tip for the staff. At Disney, we often have lots of stuff around, we have lots of garbage, we really spread out, so I leave a tip because I think it's more difficult to clean our room than maybe someone who has only been there one night or who doesn't spread a lot of stuff around like we do.
To each their own.![]()
I think a tip is for a time when someone does something above and beyond what they are already being paid to do...
Would people that think they need to tip a housekeeper or bus driver also give their bank teller a tip for doing her job? Would they tip their doctor? What about the person that tears your ticket to a movie? Now before everyone start yelling its different because the maids or bus driver get paid less... that is only true of the doctors... tellers make more than maid but less than bus drivers... and kids working in theaters make less than all those... So please... can someone give me a reasonable explanation why you think some people deserve tips for doing their jobs and others don't?
Frankly I think people are going nutty on the tipping and have forgotten that it is supposed to be for doing something beyond the job, not doing what the person already agreed to do for a set price.
Housekeeping is not a tipped position at WDW.
We don't tip at hotels. As I always say when this topic comes up, I'd never heard of tipping housekeeping at any hotel (not just Disney) before the Dis.![]()
It seems to be more of a cultural thing -- people from certain parts of the country tip everyone (even the state-mandated "full service" gas station attendant), and others do not.
Regardless of who you are/where you from, rest assured you won't get "short sheeted" if you don't leave a cutesy envelope on the bed for your housekeeping staff.
That sounds oddly like my wife, who seems to think that she needs to basically make the beds before we check out... I on the other hand have travel enough to know that if you care about the next guest you are better off making sure the bed is not made and is a complete mess so that housekeeping will actually change the sheets... but that's just me... for some reason I don't look forward to sleeping on a bed that wasn't stripped and cleaned after the last guest slept on it.