Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never know what to do anymore. Leaving 15-25 percent seems incorrect since I didn’t dine in and get an hour of service. But not tipping also feels wrong. How does 5-10 dollars on takeout and $1 at Starbucks sound?
Just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone tipping take out and at hotels must live in a fancier world than I do. It has never occurred to me to tip when I stand in line, watch my order be made and then handed to me in a bag Or, when I stay at the Holiday Inn (a luxury my parents never had when I was growing up). Honestly, the only place I've heard about hotel tipping is in movies (hardly a window into reality), and here on DCUM (which is....a unique place, to say the least).
You need to leave $5-10 a night at hotels, this is what decent people do now. Maybe not when we were kids, but now, yes.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a matter of $1. That’s how much I tip on carry out unless it’s like 10% on their iPad and it amounts to $1.31 or something lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tipped on takeout during the height of Covid when people weren’t dining in restaurants. Now that things are more back to normal, I generally don’t. I tip for dine-in service and for delivery.
For all the people saying you should tip on takeout, are you tipping at McDonald’s? At Subway?
What’s next, will I have to tip my pharmacist.
Fast food is different from non-fast food restaurants. They pay the workers more than wait staff get paid. I think your pharmacist also gets paid more than wait staff get paid although if you want them to keep supplying you with those happy pills you might want to slip them a 20.
You order online and the kitchen staff put it in a carry out box vs plate. They put it on a shelf and hand it to you. It’s no different than fast food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Either an entitled waitress or one that's on the spectrum with rigid rules.
I would have responded in the same way, OP.
OP initiated the sequence of events with her cheapness and entitled attitude.
Lol. No.
Oh, yes she did! The worker wouldn't have asked for a tip, if the OP hadn't placed an order, left the establishment, and then returned just to grab her bag of food and go. A tip wasn't required, but being cheap was noted. The worker was not polite but understandably perplexed, probably overworked, and tired.
Returned just to grab my bag of food and go—— yes. That’s precisely what getting take out is.
What is perplexing about this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Either an entitled waitress or one that's on the spectrum with rigid rules.
I would have responded in the same way, OP.
OP initiated the sequence of events with her cheapness and entitled attitude.
Lol. No.
Oh, yes she did! The worker wouldn't have asked for a tip, if the OP hadn't placed an order, left the establishment, and then returned just to grab her bag of food and go. A tip wasn't required, but being cheap was noted. The worker was not polite but understandably perplexed, probably overworked, and tired.
Anonymous wrote:Many many restaurants have dedicated to go servers who take the orders that come in and then make sure they are correct and package them up along with whatever extras are needed and take them to the carry out area. Some restaurants may pay these workers $15 an hour but many other restaurants pay them much less and they mostly get tipped. It's not usually the hostess who does all the take out work.
This anti-tipping thread, just like all the others, is full of anti-tippers but does not represent what most people who patronize restaurants do. Most people tip appropriately. That includes take out. Those people don't start or respond to threads about tipping, or not tipping, though.
So most of you are just preaching to the choir but go ahead, enjoy yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Many many restaurants have dedicated to go servers who take the orders that come in and then make sure they are correct and package them up along with whatever extras are needed and take them to the carry out area. Some restaurants may pay these workers $15 an hour but many other restaurants pay them much less and they mostly get tipped. It's not usually the hostess who does all the take out work.
This anti-tipping thread, just like all the others, is full of anti-tippers but does not represent what most people who patronize restaurants do. Most people tip appropriately. That includes take out. Those people don't start or respond to threads about tipping, or not tipping, though.
So most of you are just preaching to the choir but go ahead, enjoy yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never know what to do anymore. Leaving 15-25 percent seems incorrect since I didn’t dine in and get an hour of service. But not tipping also feels wrong. How does 5-10 dollars on takeout and $1 at Starbucks sound?
$10 on $30 takeout. No way.
Op here. My soup and sandwich were about $15. Interesting to see the restaurant owner post above about not tipping on carry out and yet people are rabid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tipped on takeout during the height of Covid when people weren’t dining in restaurants. Now that things are more back to normal, I generally don’t. I tip for dine-in service and for delivery.
For all the people saying you should tip on takeout, are you tipping at McDonald’s? At Subway?
What’s next, will I have to tip my pharmacist.
Fast food is different from non-fast food restaurants. They pay the workers more than wait staff get paid. I think your pharmacist also gets paid more than wait staff get paid although if you want them to keep supplying you with those happy pills you might want to slip them a 20.
You order online and the kitchen staff put it in a carry out box vs plate. They put it on a shelf and hand it to you. It’s no different than fast food.
It's quite different than fast food. You might want to just stick to fast food or eat at home. Restaurants are not for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never know what to do anymore. Leaving 15-25 percent seems incorrect since I didn’t dine in and get an hour of service. But not tipping also feels wrong. How does 5-10 dollars on takeout and $1 at Starbucks sound?
$10 on $30 takeout. No way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tipped on takeout during the height of Covid when people weren’t dining in restaurants. Now that things are more back to normal, I generally don’t. I tip for dine-in service and for delivery.
For all the people saying you should tip on takeout, are you tipping at McDonald’s? At Subway?
What’s next, will I have to tip my pharmacist.
Yes, I tip at McDonald's and Subway. I don't tip my pharmacist, as that's a college educated professional earning a good salary.
So it’s charity based on their education and line of work? As opposed to the service rendered?
I don't view tipping an hourly wage person for service as charity. If you wish to share your money with physicians, pharmacists, attorneys, etc. feel free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tipped on takeout during the height of Covid when people weren’t dining in restaurants. Now that things are more back to normal, I generally don’t. I tip for dine-in service and for delivery.
For all the people saying you should tip on takeout, are you tipping at McDonald’s? At Subway?
What’s next, will I have to tip my pharmacist.
Yes, I tip at McDonald's and Subway. I don't tip my pharmacist, as that's a college educated professional earning a good salary.
So it’s charity based on their education and line of work? As opposed to the service rendered?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never know what to do anymore. Leaving 15-25 percent seems incorrect since I didn’t dine in and get an hour of service. But not tipping also feels wrong. How does 5-10 dollars on takeout and $1 at Starbucks sound?
This is exactly what we do! $5 on takeout and a dollar for coffee.