Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thus how would you expect the OP to tip without cash?
If tipping is expected in a particular place, then one should carry cash when travelling to that place.
The question here is if tipping is expected.
Also, airports often have people who expect tips, for example those who work at curbside bag checks.
As an aside, I would say that it is a personal safety risk to leave the house without carrying some cash, even if one prefers to not pay in cash as a matter of course, but that is a separate discussion.
Please tell me when in the last 5 years you needed cash when you didn’t know ahead you would need it and you were in danger because you didn’t have it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do and it's always appreciated. I believe that's because most people don't, but I'm basing that on an eye test.
Is that your basis for tipping: you do when others won’t?
Anonymous wrote:Thus how would you expect the OP to tip without cash?
If tipping is expected in a particular place, then one should carry cash when travelling to that place.
The question here is if tipping is expected.
Also, airports often have people who expect tips, for example those who work at curbside bag checks.
As an aside, I would say that it is a personal safety risk to leave the house without carrying some cash, even if one prefers to not pay in cash as a matter of course, but that is a separate discussion.
Thus how would you expect the OP to tip without cash?
Anonymous wrote:I do and it's always appreciated. I believe that's because most people don't, but I'm basing that on an eye test.
Anonymous wrote:Not for that kind of service, no. I would tip a dollar or two for good service.
Most people don’t carry cash.
That has zero relevance to whether tipping is proper in a given situation.
Most people don’t carry cash.