Is it fair for a restaurant to add a mandatory tip to the bills of patrons with French accents? No, of course not -- no matter how many restaurant workers in Burlington, Vermont claim to have been stiffed by visitors from Quebec. An additional 18% pour vous!! Now, that said, is it fair for restaurants to add mandatory tips to the bills of all patrons, across the board? Yes, it's fair -- and it would make everybody's lives a lot simpler, too.
Before you start in on a rant about terrible service and why should you have to tip a waiter who forgot the bread basket and blah blah blah, hear me out.
Ever notice that former restaurant workers tend to be generous tippers? That's because if you've ever been a waitress/waiter whatever you want to call it, you how hard that woman/man carrying your tray really works. Which is to say, she/he works hard for the money, so ... you know the rest.
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My brief stint spent waitressing years ago was such a spectacular failure that I've always looked at skilled waitstaff with a mix of admiration, pity, and fear: Wow, I'm incapable of doing what you do/Wow, I never want to try to do what you do again/Wow, if you can do THAT you are one tough individual.
Make no mistake, they earn the hell out of every dime. Now, I'm not implying that terrible waitresses/waiters/bartenders, etc. don't exist. Every profession has its share of bad apples. But taking the guesswork, judgment and potential mean-spiritedness away from the dining-out equation can't hurt.
If you can't afford to leave a decent tip, don't go out to eat in the first place. Simple as that.
Do you think mandatory gratuities would save a lot of frustration on both sides?
Image via Tzuhsun Hsu/Flickr


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Comments 85
Hey, get this you lazy buttholes... if you give me lousy service...t hen you will get a lousy tip, or none at all. I dont lose a second of sleep over it either. Hows this, if you cant do a good job, stay home and get another one that you can handle.
The gall of some people in these comments.. when I was a waitress at Pizza Hutt I made less than $2 an hour. Some nights I would come home with maybe $15 in tips some nights $80 if it was busy... patrons just don't care. I like to think I tip well now because of it, but I will absolutely leave a table with NO TIP at all because I know the difference if someone is working for it or not. If they are busy and can't help it; if they're giving attitude for no reason - just smile it's not that hard; RESPECT, that's what customers want, service with a smile. Can't fill my drink up and you have one other table? Not ok. Super attentive and 'Yes ma'am, You're welcome." --- it makes a difference. All are things that aren't hard to do. Have some manners. Hustle, work for that dollar. I was NEVER standing still. Always had to bus my own tables, and in charge of the whole dining room. It's not impossible.
If a server does their job well and is polite then I tip then 25%. If I never get a refill on my drink, the food comes out cold, we have to wait for our bill, the server is rude then I tip 0%.
TIP originally stood for "to insure promptness", if it become required, it is not longer a tip, rather a fee.