ChatterBank11 mins ago
gratuity in the UK
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by newtron. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.10% is usually the magic figure, but only if you feel the service has been good. Check that a service charge isn't included in the bill, if it is don't pay again. As a student (&^% years ago) I was a barman and a waiter and I was never offered a cash tip in either role (I must have been bad) but I was often told to buy myself a drink. In the 3 bars I worked I was told to accept politely, take 20p and put it in a pot to be shared out later! Where's the fun in that?
Newtron 1 leave a tip for waiters/waitresses and it should be 10%. I never give more.
2. make sure the tip is in cash - the restaurant should not pay VAT on this, as it counts as personal income for the waiters
3. do not put your tip on the credit card, the restaurant owner will pocket it (and probably pay VAT on it)
4. it has recently been held lawful - now get this- for the restautanteur to use tips to top up his waiters wages to the (UK) legal minimum. Yup fraid so.
5. be political, have a view, shout scream or scratch, but for God's sake tip the staff - its not their fault!, and they need the money
You should expect good service in any restaurant. But if a service charge is added and if it is compulsary it will say on the menu, so no tip. But you might get exemplary service and I think that deserves a tip.
Waiters/waitresses are probably on the minimum wage and a tip helps. You also may be remembered the next time you visit and that is always nice. I never leave more than 10% as a tip.
As you will have gathered buy now neutron, what you have here is a culturl divide.
Americans are perfectly happy tipping - everyone knows the amounts, and it's normal and standard practice.
Here in the UK, tipping is frought with problems, and it sends the Brits into hissy fits. Do I tip? How much? Will it look like I'm being patronising if I do, or mean if I don't? These are the problems Brits anguish over all the time - a remnant of our class system I suppose.
If you are happy to tip, and it appears you are, then fine I'm sure most people in service industries accept that Americans do tip, but you'll go a long wsay to find a Brit who does so as a matter of course, or who feels wholly comfortable doing it. Repressed? Us? As you would say - you betcha!
I haven't read all of the answers because it's Friday afternoon and I cannae be bothered!
However, I always thought that if you had a designated waiter/ress then you would tip a standard 10-15%, or 20% if the service was particularly outstanding (or you're tiddled).
If you don't have a specific 'person' (like say at a Beefeater/ Brewsters/ Hungry Horse type joint) then don't tip.
Also, a lot of places nowadays I have noticed add the service charge for you so you could wind up paying it twice!