Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've held the line at 15%, pre-tax, on the food and soft drinks. If there's alcohol, then we'll calculate the tip based on what it would have cost as a soft drink; i.e. iced tea or Coke.
Wow you are extraordinarily cheap. Are you very old? Do you tip to the penny or round up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you tip on pretax amount and subtract alcohol as the restaurant has already over priced it for profits
This is asinine reasoning and you're just screwing over the server. Hope you feel good about yourself.
Of course the alcohol is overpriced, but so are the steaks and seafood. Are you going to subtract the tip on those as well? What’s left?
Tip on the whole amount and be generous.
Of course everything is marked up, how else would the restaurant cover overhead and make some profit for the owner. It's not a charity.
Anonymous wrote:Never.
I also didn't tip for the Panera to go order I placed online at lunch and felt zero guilt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you tip on pretax amount and subtract alcohol as the restaurant has already over priced it for profits
This is asinine reasoning and you're just screwing over the server. Hope you feel good about yourself.
Of course the alcohol is overpriced, but so are the steaks and seafood. Are you going to subtract the tip on those as well? What’s left?
Tip on the whole amount and be generous.
Anonymous wrote:We've held the line at 15%, pre-tax, on the food and soft drinks. If there's alcohol, then we'll calculate the tip based on what it would have cost as a soft drink; i.e. iced tea or Coke.
Anonymous wrote:In DC I believe the tax amount is 9% so I just double the tax and add it to the bill.
Anonymous wrote:You don't tip on tax or alcohol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've held the line at 15%, pre-tax, on the food and soft drinks. If there's alcohol, then we'll calculate the tip based on what it would have cost as a soft drink; i.e. iced tea or Coke.
Truly astonishing level of being a cheapskate. Imagine going through your bill with this kind of a fine-tooth comb to figure out how much you can skimp on paying service workers.
Why can’t the restaurant owner pay decent wages?
Anonymous wrote:Some restaurants have added a footnote in the menu that the service charge goes to kitchen and other admin staff (I.e. not your server). Do you tip 20% or reduce by x% to opining the server for the owners economic decisions!
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've held the line at 15%, pre-tax, on the food and soft drinks. If there's alcohol, then we'll calculate the tip based on what it would have cost as a soft drink; i.e. iced tea or Coke.
Truly astonishing level of being a cheapskate. Imagine going through your bill with this kind of a fine-tooth comb to figure out how much you can skimp on paying service workers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in DC and eat out a lot. I was tipping 22 percent on post tax amount of the entire bill, as that has been standard for many years. Anyone who tips less than that should feel awful for how you have treated the people who have served you.
Because of inconsiderate people, however, DC has changed. Now there is a 20 percent automatic service charge on pre-tax amounts at most restaurants. And there is an extra tip line. It has been confusing for me. But, I think I am going to start adding 1/4-1/2 of the service charge as a tip.
No, the service charge is different. You're supposed to tip 20-22% on top of that. That is the standard. You should feel awful for how you have treated the people who have served you.
That is not standard. DCUM must be filled with extraordinarily good tippers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in DC and eat out a lot. I was tipping 22 percent on post tax amount of the entire bill, as that has been standard for many years. Anyone who tips less than that should feel awful for how you have treated the people who have served you.
Because of inconsiderate people, however, DC has changed. Now there is a 20 percent automatic service charge on pre-tax amounts at most restaurants. And there is an extra tip line. It has been confusing for me. But, I think I am going to start adding 1/4-1/2 of the service charge as a tip.
No, the service charge is different. You're supposed to tip 20-22% on top of that. That is the standard. You should feel awful for how you have treated the people who have served you.