Anonymous wrote:Tip less.
I'm not sure many people reported their tips honestly before too.
It's messed up we get a 1099-K for selling a few things on ebay and have to pay taxes on the stuff we already paid taxes for. It's income yet tips aren't income?! bs.
Anonymous wrote:Or it is just big bump up for them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Democrats all voted against no tax on tips, I’m so over them I’m voting Republican next time.
+1000 enough's enough.
Anonymous wrote:Or it is just big bump up for them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in tax policy. This is one of the stupidest moments in tax policy history.
At any rate, I won't change my tipping because of it, and I imagine very few will. Tipping culture is ingrained in culture in a way that won't really allow people to tip less.
+1 Such a stupid proposal
But, I will continue to tip as I normally do -- 20 to 25% at a sit down restaurant, 0% at a fast casual / fast food restaurant.
Tell us why... since the paper work involved in tracking tip income is usually not worth the amount the government receives.
Anonymous wrote:Democrats all voted against no tax on tips, I’m so over them I’m voting Republican next time.
Anonymous wrote:I will definitely reduce my tipping. When I tip, I tip between 20-25% and I include it on my card, not cash. I pay taxes on all my income. What makes tip workers special. I swear, W-2 workers are the only workers paying income taxes these days.