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22 August 2014, 09:28 PM | #31 | |
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22 August 2014, 09:32 PM | #32 |
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Most resturants in Brasil include the tip on the check. I don't have a problem with that cause it's a cultural thing. I don't have an issue with the tip as long as as the service is commensurate. I don't remember in Europe or the UK because it's been a while since I've been there.
What bothered me here, (Las Vegas) is the practice that all corporate events that hold their meetings at the hotel with receptions or dinner is the 23%. They call it a service charge and the hotel locks up almost 7.5% of the gratuity on top of the 85.00 they charge for the chicken dinner. I think they should disclose this, most people think the staff receives the full amount. Union food servers working here make about 15.00 per hour plus gratuities
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22 August 2014, 09:37 PM | #33 |
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Whoa, "restaurant gratuity?" Never heard of that. That sounds shady. The servers should get all of anything called "gratuity" in my book...
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22 August 2014, 09:47 PM | #34 | |
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22 August 2014, 10:43 PM | #35 | |
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I've hosted receptions/banquets at upscale hotels around US and the contracts always had a fixed surcharge for service. And it was above and beyond the food/beverage price. It's not just LV. The thing that grates on many excellent servers' nerves is that they have no way to increase their earnings during a banquet - each gets a fixed amount whether they provide great service or poor service. The upside is they also don't get penalized in the tip for poor recipe execution by the chef
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22 August 2014, 11:08 PM | #36 |
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I'm sort of confused here fellas, forget about corporate for a minute, when me and my wife go out for a meal if the bill was £100 or there about I give the waiter/waitress £10 (10%). What would be an acceptable tip in the US please?
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22 August 2014, 11:10 PM | #37 | |
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I tip in Europe about 10%, if the food and service is good. But I think it's different for me, since I'm a restaurant owner but have worked my way up from dishwasher!
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22 August 2014, 11:12 PM | #38 |
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Here is a minimum 15 % going to 25 %
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22 August 2014, 11:13 PM | #39 |
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In America, 20% of the total bill (although some argue you should not pay a tip on taxes, and only pay a percentage of the non-taxed portion. To me that is nit-picking). I leave 20% minimum of total bill BUT if the bill is for a large party, some restaurants include a gratuity (tip) of 18% so I don't tip on top of that unless service was exceptional.
I should add that a most of the restaurants we go to we are regulars, so we are pretty generous in tipping. We can afford it and these waiters work hard. |
22 August 2014, 11:24 PM | #40 |
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....into the wind.
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22 August 2014, 11:57 PM | #41 |
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I bring my own wine and pay the 20 for corkage. I'm not paying 700 for a similar 200 dollar bottle I have at home. Don't bring a wine that they carry on their wine list. It's kinda rude.
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22 August 2014, 11:58 PM | #42 | |
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Mark, sorry for the "cute" comment, that came off as combative and I didn't mean it that way, forgive me.
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23 August 2014, 12:03 AM | #43 | |
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Also, I don't think anything should be different as regards tips, if we both go to the same restaurant, both receive the same service, why should you tip different from me? I tip at 10%.
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23 August 2014, 12:20 AM | #44 |
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On tipping in America, several years ago I watched Oprah (when she had her show) and she had on about 8 waitresses (and one male waiter) who talked about tipping. Here is the summary of their input:
Non-Americans are bad tippers. Some leave no tip. (probably because they don't know they should). Women are bad tippers in general. Ex-waitresses usually tip well. Many women use a tip card to calculate to the exact penny a 15% tip. White males are the best tippers. By far. When there are large groups, over 6 people, customers leave low tips, thinking no one will know. Waiters hate serving large groups because it is a lot of work for low reward. Nota bene: I'm not saying this is right or not, or even true, just reporting on the opinions of actually waitresses. |
23 August 2014, 01:22 AM | #45 |
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G = Gross revenue (1000.00 in your example)
T = Total gratuity (211.37 in your example) ********************************************* T = G x (1 - 0.081) Food Server total gratuity = T x 0.18 x 0.86 Restaurant total gratuity = T x (0.05 + 0.18 x 0.14) ********************************************* Or if you prefer raw percentages: T = G x (100 - 8.1)/100 Food Server total gratuity = T x 18/100 x 86/100 Restaurant total gratuity = T x (5/100 + 18/100 x 14/100) ********************************************* |
23 August 2014, 01:28 AM | #46 |
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23 August 2014, 01:43 AM | #47 |
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The no is for, it wouldn't be acceptable with a 10% tip in the US. Not in your waiters eyes anyway...
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23 August 2014, 01:44 AM | #48 |
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Yeah, well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man. |
23 August 2014, 01:45 AM | #49 | |
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23 August 2014, 01:58 AM | #50 |
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That wasn't my question, you must have read it wrong, but I see what you mean, I didn't think it would have been acceptable either.
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23 August 2014, 02:13 AM | #51 |
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Sorry Dave, I read your text wrong, I read "would that be an acceptable tip.
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23 August 2014, 02:18 AM | #52 |
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I always tip well.
Anybody else notice that it was a 1000k dinner bill? One million? One heck of a meal! |
23 August 2014, 02:53 AM | #53 |
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23 August 2014, 02:57 AM | #54 |
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Tipping to me is like a sales commission - IMHO it is best to gross it up into the budget you envision for the night. Remember that tips also apply to bartenders, valets, lounge stewards, etc. I have quite often had >$1000 dinner bill but also noted later that my total gratuities approached 35% when all was said and done.
It's just the cost of making a pleasant evening.
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23 August 2014, 02:59 AM | #55 |
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I do like the restaurants that post a cheat sheet at the bottom of the CC slip. It shows $ amount for several tip % options.
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23 August 2014, 08:47 AM | #56 |
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+1
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23 August 2014, 08:50 AM | #57 |
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23 August 2014, 08:55 AM | #58 | |
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Yeah I like that feature too! After a bottle of wine, a few beers, a bourbon etc... It schometimesch is diffikulth tho doo tsche matttsche.
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23 August 2014, 12:08 PM | #59 |
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T.I.P. - To Insure Promptness
So, here in MI, servers are paid $2.65 an hour. That's it. And a tip credit of $4.75 per hour. I think that means that the Feds expect staff to make $4.75 per hour in tips and servers must claim the $4.75 an hour as income, for tax purposes, even if they make less. Of course, nobody claims more if they make more. The feds. would love to get rid of tipping - they would get to claim every earned dollar that way. I tend to go to the same restaurants, so I tip - what many would say - as too much. But, I get great service, time and time again. Example, I have Steak Fajitas and a Coke regularly at my favorite Mexican Restaurant - Bill, with 6% sales tax, $15.11 - I'll drop a $20 on the table. If I happen to have 11 cents, I'll leave that, too. I get no hassles - treat me like the owner. I can get more chips, salsa, or soda in seconds. You get what you pay for. I only eat out once, maybe twice a week, and they aren't huge bills. I can afford a couple extra bucks for top notch service over average to good service. 6 months old. http://www.dol.gov/whd/state/tipped.htm
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23 August 2014, 03:19 PM | #60 | |
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I think I have been there on a couple of occasions.
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