When you calculate your tip at a restaurant, do you tip based on the cost of your meal alone, or do you tip based on the cost of your meal plus tax?
I have always tipped based on the cost of the meal alone. I thought: Why on earth would I tip on sales tax? In fact, it really annoys me when restaurant receipts include those pre-calcluated tip percentages a the bottom (as "suggestions" for how much you should tip) and they include the sales tax. Now I wonder if I have made some sort of social faux pas.
In Friday"s WSJ (Aug. 1, pW6) there was a review of a book called "Waiter Rant." They ran down a list of offensive restaurant customers, including this:
"And there are the cheapskates who compute the tip before the tax is added."
Do wait staff really consider someone who tips pre-tax a cheapskate? Is this really the view of wait staff, or is it perhaps the opinion of the journalist creeping in?
I have been a waitress (when I was in college), but it was in a no-sales-tax state so this was never an issue. Which begs the question: Why should a waiter in a sales tax state automatically get tipped more for the same value of meal as a waiter in a no-sales-tax state?
I do not see tipping pre-tax as being a cheapskate. I see it as being logical. However, if the concensus of the board is that this makes me a cheapskate, I will consider tipping based on post-tax.
However, if I do feel I "must" tip post-tax, I will cut down even further on dining out (something I don't do very often now). I have reluctantly accepted that a 15% tip is now considered the "norm," and that has caused me to eat out less and less. When deciding whether or not dining out is "worth it," I do think about the cost of the tip. If I have to add 15% to the cost of the meal AND the cost of the sales tax, I don't know if I'll be able to stomach the idea of dining in a restaurant again except on very rare occasions.
I have always tipped based on the cost of the meal alone. I thought: Why on earth would I tip on sales tax? In fact, it really annoys me when restaurant receipts include those pre-calcluated tip percentages a the bottom (as "suggestions" for how much you should tip) and they include the sales tax. Now I wonder if I have made some sort of social faux pas.
In Friday"s WSJ (Aug. 1, pW6) there was a review of a book called "Waiter Rant." They ran down a list of offensive restaurant customers, including this:
"And there are the cheapskates who compute the tip before the tax is added."
Do wait staff really consider someone who tips pre-tax a cheapskate? Is this really the view of wait staff, or is it perhaps the opinion of the journalist creeping in?
I have been a waitress (when I was in college), but it was in a no-sales-tax state so this was never an issue. Which begs the question: Why should a waiter in a sales tax state automatically get tipped more for the same value of meal as a waiter in a no-sales-tax state?
I do not see tipping pre-tax as being a cheapskate. I see it as being logical. However, if the concensus of the board is that this makes me a cheapskate, I will consider tipping based on post-tax.
However, if I do feel I "must" tip post-tax, I will cut down even further on dining out (something I don't do very often now). I have reluctantly accepted that a 15% tip is now considered the "norm," and that has caused me to eat out less and less. When deciding whether or not dining out is "worth it," I do think about the cost of the tip. If I have to add 15% to the cost of the meal AND the cost of the sales tax, I don't know if I'll be able to stomach the idea of dining in a restaurant again except on very rare occasions.
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