Anonymous wrote:I tip 15% on takeout and 25% when we eat in. $2 tip?? Seriously? If you can’t afford to tip, eat at home.
Anonymous wrote:I tip 15% on takeout and 25% when we eat in. $2 tip?? Seriously? If you can’t afford to tip, eat at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Me and my husband's orders are anywhere from $20 to $50, so I always tip $2 maybe $3, which I thought was fair. Google'd out of curiosity and several links claim the to-go standard is 10% with many leaving 20%? I worked in the service industry in high school and for a year in college, so I thought I was a decent tipper. How is leaving a $5 (to $10!?) to the gal (hostess/cashier?) for every $50 order she hands off fair to normal waitresses and bartenders who have to actually work?
Honestly I assume the overwhelming majority of to-go orders don't tip 10 or 20%, they actually tip $0?
How is it unfair to the waitress or bartender? I'm not sitting down to eat so I can't tip them. When I do, I tip the same percentage I do on takeout (20% rounded up to an even dollar amount). It's not unfair to employees who don't serve you to tip the one who does.
Anonymous wrote:You're a bad tipper and have no understanding of the industry from your one year in high school. Let me break this down.
1. You call the restaurant.
2. Typically your call is forwarded to the bartender, who enters your order.
3. Kitchen makes order, packages in to-go containers, sticks under the warmer.
4. Bartender or Expo puts together your order from the variety of to-go's awaiting packaging.
5. Bartender or Expo completes order with silverware, sauces (some of which they have to make at the time of the order), and other special whatever.
6. Order either stays at expo station or comes to bar.
7. You arrive to pick up order. Either you come to the bar, the hostess goes to the bar/expo, or someone brings it to you curbside.
8. You throw them a dollar or two.
Keep in mind, bartender is serving a bar of people in addition to doing service drinks, possibly having a few tables on the floor, and managing all the other takeout orders.
Tip for your service. Don't want to? Enjoy the McDonald's drive thru.
Anonymous wrote:You're a bad tipper and have no understanding of the industry from your one year in high school. Let me break this down.
1. You call the restaurant.
2. Typically your call is forwarded to the bartender, who enters your order.
3. Kitchen makes order, packages in to-go containers, sticks under the warmer.
4. Bartender or Expo puts together your order from the variety of to-go's awaiting packaging.
5. Bartender or Expo completes order with silverware, sauces (some of which they have to make at the time of the order), and other special whatever.
6. Order either stays at expo station or comes to bar.
7. You arrive to pick up order. Either you come to the bar, the hostess goes to the bar/expo, or someone brings it to you curbside.
8. You throw them a dollar or two.
Keep in mind, bartender is serving a bar of people in addition to doing service drinks, possibly having a few tables on the floor, and managing all the other takeout orders.
Tip for your service. Don't want to? Enjoy the McDonald's drive thru.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t tip on take out orders
Anonymous wrote:We certainly aren’t wealthy by DCUM standards, but our income has not been impacted by the pandemic. I tip 20% on take out - a small donation to people who have been severely impacted by the pandemic. Prepandemic, I did 10% on take out and 20% on eat in.
Anonymous wrote:Me and my husband's orders are anywhere from $20 to $50, so I always tip $2 maybe $3, which I thought was fair. Google'd out of curiosity and several links claim the to-go standard is 10% with many leaving 20%? I worked in the service industry in high school and for a year in college, so I thought I was a decent tipper. How is leaving a $5 (to $10!?) to the gal (hostess/cashier?) for every $50 order she hands off fair to normal waitresses and bartenders who have to actually work?
Honestly I assume the overwhelming majority of to-go orders don't tip 10 or 20%, they actually tip $0?