Originally posted by lrodptl
Let me be the first to dissent. Tip well if the service is used and don't if it is not. If you can notify guest services of your eating plan that night they can use your table if you don't.
When you tip your server, assistant server, and head server at the end of the cruise, you're really tipping for all meals that you've eaten on the cruise -- breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks, at the main dining rooms, buffets,
Castaway Cay, and the snack bars -- even those that are not served by the three individuals to whom you are providing tips. If everyone tips their service team, it all works out.
It's a dirty little secret in the mainstream cruise business that servers get about $50 per month and "room and board" from the cruise line to work long days, 7 days a week, with no days off for months on end. And their "room and board" isn't anything like what the passengers receive. Their tips are their compensation. (We can debate whether this is fair to the passengers and to the service staff, but it's the reality today.)
The suggested tip amounts take into account that not every passeenger will be dining in one of the main dining rooms each night.
Regarding the suggestion, "If you can notify guest services of your eating plan that night they can use your table if you don't," that's not true. Every passenger is assigned to a specific dining time, rotation, and table number. It's polite to let your servers know ahead of time when you're going to Palo, but that doesn't mean that other passengers will be assigned to your table that night.