If you’re going to a regular salon and it’s not the owner, 20% is standard (even with expensive highlights). If they have their own chair somewhere, tipping is up for debate. |
No, she is not the salon owner. She rents the space so has to pay those expenses out of her own pocket, along with any supplies that aren't shared. The salon owner gets the revenue from the renters and that is why you don't tip the owner when she/he does your hair (I do anyway since it is a personal service but it is not customary). |
I don't understand this either. I also don't tip the guy who changes my oil. The tipping business is so arbitrary. |
Because she already sets that into her cost. |
This-also applies to dining out & delivery-if you can’t afford the tip then you need to make a change as suggested above. |
I tip 15% and my bill is around $300. Is it considered low? |
| Yes. |
Exactly. And then she tries to justify it retroactively. And rolling my eyes at the people who don’t want to tip on $200 highlights or pay $175 for a cut they love. Simple solution: go to someone who charges a fraction who may botch your hair. Either you can afford it or you can’t. But stop all these ridiculous attempts at justification. OP, don’t try to stiff people. It’s bad karma. |
You should be tipping 20% and you know it. 15% is super outdated. So many cheap people. If you can pay $300, you can tip 20%. -A white collar worker who did shift work in high school and college |
You can be as snarky as you want and you can die on your hill too. The fact is you should tip the stylist. You know it and you’re cheap. |
The retroactive self enabling was wild to behold. Folks will justify anything to make it ok to be cheap. You clearly can no longer afford this service at the level you’ve received it in the past. You’ll need to find a new provider or spread appointments out to budget. |
I promise it was the way you presented it. Basically. |
| Yes, you tip. Sounds like you need to cut back expenses and this is one of them. |
15 is fine. |
| The only thing this thread shows is that people of means have ZERO clue into the real finances and decision making of stylist and guest. You don't stop going to a hair dresser, a long time hairdresser, because you can't afford a tip, which is a bonus for a job well done. This is not a celebrity stylist with a waitlist. It's another person doing the best they can to make ends meet and probably very happy to get that $150 or $200 even without the tip. |