-32 points

OOP jokes, but I’ve went to one or two restaurants that tried to do that in the past. I deducted the pre-included tip from the optional tip, and then never went to those restaurants again

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26 points

Yeah, fuck those restaurants for paying their workers a living wage! My wallet comes first!

for the cognitively impaired

/s

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56 points
*

This has big “ill pay $20 if it has free shipping, but won’t pay $15 + $5 shipping” energy.

Id rather buy food from a restaurant that doesn’t need tipping and is more expensive because they pay their workers fair wage instead of a place where the workers feel like they have to do the food service equivalent of pan handling on the side of the street.

They get paid the same. One is less dehumanizing.

Leaving your wage up to a fickle customer is hell. Getting paid less because the cooks accidentally overcooked the customers steak so they felt like they werent “treated well” or some bs is ridiculous.

(The bottom half of this rant isnt aimed at you, but at tipping in general)

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5 points

You both said the same thing. If tip is included in the price, then there is no need to tip additionally.

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3 points
*

You misunderstand. I’m willing - excited, even - to have restaurants that charge more upfront. I’m not willing to pay double the expected tip just because the restaurant hoped to hide additional costs in the bill and hoped that the payer wouldn’t see it. In case my original comment was not clear enough, that was what they tried doing. 15% gratuity tacked on in small letters at the end of the bill, and this charge was never mentioned at any point, and there was additional space to add tip (of course, with the recommended option being 15% after the 15% gratuity). The sum of the pre-included tip and the tip that I gave is equivalent to tip that I would have given had restaurant not tried this kind of shady bullshit. So I fail to see how I’ve done the workers of the restaurant any wrong.

I choose not to revisit that restaurant for their shady business practices, not because I was unwilling to pay a mandatory tip. Given the original post, I figured that that was clear that that was what I had meant. Clearly I was mistaken.

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15 points

There’s literally no profit? Like aside from already running a successful restaurant (hard), doing this will earn the business owner no extra income.

It is still based af because then the wait staff gets paid a lot more

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142 points

European here. Tipping is not already included in the price of the meal. Living wage is included in the price of the meal.

Tips is completely voluntary, if you think the service was excellent then you really just round up to the nearest nice round number (something like 22.85 becomes 25)

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24 points

Tipping is not already included in the price of the meal. Living wage is included in the price of the meal.

That is the tip. In the US, “tipped” labor often has a reduced minimum wage, under the expectation that they make the difference up in tips.

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8 points

Yup, something like $2.50/hr, when federal minimum wage is ~$7.50. If a server doesn’t make minimum wage, the restaurant is required to step them up.

It’s a stupid system IMO, because not leaving a tip is a giant slap in the face, when it really should just mean “you did just okay.” If the service is really that bad, I will complain and expect a comp or something on the bill, so the bill should reflect “good enough” service. I’d actually like to pay tips if it actually meant “fantastic service,” like putting up with my screaming children, convincing the cook to make something off-menu, or still providing good service when we’re not spending much (we don’t drink, and that’s like 50% of the bill). I’d prefer to tip based on the service, not on the size of the bill.

Oh, and if we had such a system, not taxing tips would make a ton of sense since it’s pretty literally a gift.

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0 points

In the US, if you are never going to return to an establishment, why tip?

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0 points

Because you care about other people?

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-5 points

i you mean it, tip 10-15% of the bill! (often the “living wage” is still precarious.)

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31 points

American here. I understood most of what you said, except for the phrase “living wage”. Could you explain this to me? I’ve never heard of it before.

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3 points

Oh man how I wish to tell you all about Belgium’s healthindex.

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2 points

Livable wage, is that a better term for it?

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5 points

Nah, all we have are poverty wages and billionaires here.

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21 points

Cuz noone else pointed it out to you, the comment you responded to was sarcastic. It wasnt a language barrier thing.

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3 points

Well, a lot of restaurants add a few percent tip to large parties in my experience (and some try to start that shit for tables of 4).

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2 points

But that means if I don’t tip they’ll think I thought the service wasn’t excellent :(

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7 points

In the US, sure. But in Europe, a tip isn’t expected, so any tip you give means “better than average service.” As in, what tips should’ve been all along.

I have no problem giving tips, I have a problem with tips being expected.

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3 points
*

someone once told me tips where invented to skip the queue at the bar… and apparenty its also some witty acronym for that as well (the brits supposedly invented the concept and they famously like to play with their words)

edit: “To Insure Promptness”, but apparently that’s just a backronym that someone made later… damn, i enjoyed that factoid, never should’ve checked it xD

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My guy/gal/pal.

We do things differently in different parts of Europe.

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17 points

You’re right, I made the same mistake as OP. There is no “European system of tipping”.

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22 points

To add to that I’d say there’s no drama attached to not leaving a tip.

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13 points

Totally, waiters don’t expect a tip at all. So if it’s given, it’s appreciated even more.

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-4 points

What’s with the OP image? Seems to invite contempt, which corrodes the legitimacy of the message? I’m saddened by the decision-making ability of most artists these days.

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4 points

Fuck off thats my William

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2 points

does he top

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1 point

He has a kid so, yes.

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12 points

Tips aren’t included in the meal prices over here (Wales), our servers just get paid actual wages for the actual job that they’re doing.

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