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Tipping in restaurants
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What's the current appropriate level for tipping when you've received good service in a restaurant these days?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Some 40 years ago, I was taught that a British 'gentleman' leaves a tip amounting to 1/7th of the bill...ie about 14 or 15%. I still do just that.
What a lady - or non-gentleman - does, I do not know. However, when some friends and I once dined together, one of them said he'd deal with the waiter's tip. When the poor chap arrived, my friend said "Never wear a damp vest!" He did actually give him a real 'tip' in the end.
What a lady - or non-gentleman - does, I do not know. However, when some friends and I once dined together, one of them said he'd deal with the waiter's tip. When the poor chap arrived, my friend said "Never wear a damp vest!" He did actually give him a real 'tip' in the end.
For me it depends on the value of the bill and whether the service is worth tipping. I always check first if service is added on already.
4 of us had a meal on Tuesday night and the bill came to �80, and we tipped around �10. But when my boyfriend and I go to our local restaurant we've spent well over �100 in the past, but we don't usually tip over �20.
4 of us had a meal on Tuesday night and the bill came to �80, and we tipped around �10. But when my boyfriend and I go to our local restaurant we've spent well over �100 in the past, but we don't usually tip over �20.
i usually calculate on 10% for a tip.
A friend of mine is so tight with his money though that he worked out that if 10 of us went out, he could collect cash off everyone and then pay on his credit card. He never added a tip and this almost paid for his meal.
He always paid the whole bill by his card and it was years before someone spotted him paying and realised what he'd done all those years.
We send a witness with him now when he pays.
A friend of mine is so tight with his money though that he worked out that if 10 of us went out, he could collect cash off everyone and then pay on his credit card. He never added a tip and this almost paid for his meal.
He always paid the whole bill by his card and it was years before someone spotted him paying and realised what he'd done all those years.
We send a witness with him now when he pays.
elderado, how many people have you met in you life that tip plumbers, or bus drivers, or or the guy that fixes your washing machine or the cleaner at the school you youngster attends.
Need I go on?
What makes haidressers, taxi drivers and waiters think that they alone in society should get bunged 15% for doing what they are paid to do?
Actually it's not true that I have never been tipped in my life I once received a glass of cheap wine for turning out on christmas morning to fix a burst water pipe, and another tip I once got was and I quote "never wipe your ar$e on a broken bottle"
Need I go on?
What makes haidressers, taxi drivers and waiters think that they alone in society should get bunged 15% for doing what they are paid to do?
Actually it's not true that I have never been tipped in my life I once received a glass of cheap wine for turning out on christmas morning to fix a burst water pipe, and another tip I once got was and I quote "never wipe your ar$e on a broken bottle"
I usually leave a tip in the order of 15%.
On some occasions, though, it can be much higher. About 10 years ago I realised that I'd be on my own for Christmas Day lunch. I thought about paying �30 or so for a 'bog standard' Christmas Day lunch at a local hotel or pub but I fancied something a bit different. After checking 'Time Out' to see what was open on Chrismas Day, I drove 80 miles to a restaurant in south London which served a mixture of Indian and African food. I hadn't booked but, when I turned up at about 2.00pm they managed to squeeze me in. The decor and ambiance were great. The staff, despite being under pressure were friendly, courteous, helpful and efficient. The meal was probably the best 'ethnic' food I've had in my life. Over a leisurely period of 3 hours (during which I made friends with lots of other diners) I had a starter, main course (with all the extras like popadums, naan bread, etc) and the most expensive dessert on the menu. I also had two of the dearer soft drinks. (The restaurant was unlicensed for religious reasons and I was driving anyway). The total bill came to about �10.50 but the proprietor said 'Let's just call it a tenner'. When it came to deciding on a tip, I thought "I could have forked out 30 quid for a hotel meal that I wouldn't particularly have enjoyed. Instead I've just had a wonderful meal for a tenner". So I left a �20 tip.
Chris
On some occasions, though, it can be much higher. About 10 years ago I realised that I'd be on my own for Christmas Day lunch. I thought about paying �30 or so for a 'bog standard' Christmas Day lunch at a local hotel or pub but I fancied something a bit different. After checking 'Time Out' to see what was open on Chrismas Day, I drove 80 miles to a restaurant in south London which served a mixture of Indian and African food. I hadn't booked but, when I turned up at about 2.00pm they managed to squeeze me in. The decor and ambiance were great. The staff, despite being under pressure were friendly, courteous, helpful and efficient. The meal was probably the best 'ethnic' food I've had in my life. Over a leisurely period of 3 hours (during which I made friends with lots of other diners) I had a starter, main course (with all the extras like popadums, naan bread, etc) and the most expensive dessert on the menu. I also had two of the dearer soft drinks. (The restaurant was unlicensed for religious reasons and I was driving anyway). The total bill came to about �10.50 but the proprietor said 'Let's just call it a tenner'. When it came to deciding on a tip, I thought "I could have forked out 30 quid for a hotel meal that I wouldn't particularly have enjoyed. Instead I've just had a wonderful meal for a tenner". So I left a �20 tip.
Chris
I don't understand why you nearly all seem to base your tip on a percentage of the bill. If I went to a restaurant and spent �50 on dinner for me and 'her in drawers', I may leave �3 or �4 if the service was good. However, if I really splashed out, for example if it was the first anniversary of the last time I got a word in edge ways, and spent �300 on the meal I would leave the same, assuming the service was as good.
Think about it. A �300 meal doesn't take any more effort to serve than a �25 meal. It probably didn't even take the chef any longer to cook. It's just that the second meal comprised caviar, lobster, truffles etc.
Think about it. A �300 meal doesn't take any more effort to serve than a �25 meal. It probably didn't even take the chef any longer to cook. It's just that the second meal comprised caviar, lobster, truffles etc.