J u l e e
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,531
Location: Cincinnati
Jun 28, 2014 2:50:47 GMT
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Post by J u l e e on Feb 11, 2022 22:36:14 GMT
where Ross and Rachel have dinner with her father and the restaurant gives them a receipt with carbon paper and Ross leaves a $20 tip for a $200 meal!
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Post by pixiechick on Feb 11, 2022 22:40:27 GMT
where Ross and Rachel have dinner with her father and the restaurant gives them a receipt with carbon paper and Ross leaves a $20 tip for a $200 meal! Is that the one where her dad tipped too cheaply and he was adding on to his tip? Or a different one entirely where Ross was the one paying?
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J u l e e
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,531
Location: Cincinnati
Jun 28, 2014 2:50:47 GMT
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Post by J u l e e on Feb 11, 2022 22:42:22 GMT
Yes, that’s the one! And Ross thought his 10% tip was generous.
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Post by pixiechick on Feb 11, 2022 23:00:42 GMT
Yeah, I don't think that was generous even back then, was it?
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Post by Darcy Collins on Feb 11, 2022 23:15:57 GMT
I thought the 20 was on top of whatever the father tipped, but they never gave an amount that he tipped so it wasn't clear what the total tip was.
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Post by cmpeter on Feb 11, 2022 23:19:40 GMT
I also thought he was supplementing The dad's tip.
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J u l e e
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,531
Location: Cincinnati
Jun 28, 2014 2:50:47 GMT
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Post by J u l e e on Feb 11, 2022 23:32:56 GMT
The dad tipped 4%.
It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter.
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Post by Darcy Collins on Feb 11, 2022 23:39:44 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. So really 14% together, or am I misunderstanding? My husband still struggles with 15% no longer being standard - and we're not that old!
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Post by Zee on Feb 11, 2022 23:42:30 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do.
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Post by Darcy Collins on Feb 11, 2022 23:51:23 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do. Not sure where you live, but I've heard that the east coast has been 20% longer than the west. I grew up with the double the tax where SF sales tax was 8%
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Post by myshelly on Feb 12, 2022 0:14:50 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do. I’m younger than you and was taught 15%.
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sassyangel
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,456
Jun 26, 2014 23:58:32 GMT
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Post by sassyangel on Feb 12, 2022 0:18:21 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do. There are old ranchers around here that leave a buck tip, no matter what. 😵💫
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Post by chaosisapony on Feb 12, 2022 0:25:09 GMT
My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do. Not sure where you live, but I've heard that the east coast has been 20% longer than the west. I grew up with the double the tax where SF sales tax was 8% Same, in the Sacramento area we were taught "double the tax" which is roughly 15%. That's what most people still do. It's only online I hear about people regularly tipping 20%.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 25, 2024 14:45:57 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Feb 12, 2022 0:27:23 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. So really 14% together, or am I misunderstanding? My husband still struggles with 15% no longer being standard - and we're not that old! I was taught that 15% was the minimum except in cases of bad service in which 10% was acceptable. Our minimum these days is 18% but often leave 20%.
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Post by katlady on Feb 12, 2022 0:34:38 GMT
receipt with carbon paper And I remember making sure we asked for the carbon paper so we could take it home and rip it up. I don't remember 10% tip, always 15% (double the tax). It seems like 20% has been a more recent thing, like less than 10 years.
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Post by sideways on Feb 12, 2022 0:43:32 GMT
I waited tables all through college, from diners to fine dining. A 10% tip always sucked. The minimum was 15%. I reserve that for bad service now. I always tip at least 20%. If the service is from a friend (like my hairdresser…we’ve been friends since our sons were in kindergarten together), I leave 30%.
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Post by Zee on Feb 12, 2022 0:45:55 GMT
I guess I come from a family of good tippers 🤷🏼♀️ But I don't remember ever doing anything different, and we didn't even have a lot of money growing up. Y'all cheapskates 🤭
ETA I always leave 20% for minimum service, more if they keep my drink full at all times and are pleasant and quick. Then it's 30 or more. If the meal was cheap, it might be 50. There aren't many relatively inexpensive ways to make someone's day better than by letting them know you appreciate them with a good tip.
Plus, I used to work food service.
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johnnysmom
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,686
Jun 25, 2014 21:16:33 GMT
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Post by johnnysmom on Feb 12, 2022 0:48:59 GMT
My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do. I’m younger than you and was taught 15%. Same. It was always 15% standard, 18% for excellent service. (Double the tax also worked well enough since tax was 7%)
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Post by Alexxussss on Feb 12, 2022 1:17:55 GMT
East coast- 20% is standard; more for excellent service. It’s always been this way as far back as I can remember.
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AmeliaBloomer
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,842
Location: USA
Jun 26, 2014 5:01:45 GMT
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Post by AmeliaBloomer on Feb 12, 2022 1:35:06 GMT
I was a waitress in undergrad, grad school, and then to support my teaching habit - 15% was standard and 20% was not at all uncommon.
Years: late 1970s to late 1980s.
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milocat
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,617
Location: 55 degrees north in Alberta, Canada
Mar 18, 2015 4:10:31 GMT
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Post by milocat on Feb 12, 2022 1:43:54 GMT
Double the tax here is 10%, so I guess it should be truole or quadruple. Tip was 10% for as long as I can remember. 15% didn't last long when we've bumped up to 15-20. Machines seem to ask 15, 18 or 20% as standard options here.
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Post by workingclassdog on Feb 12, 2022 2:11:25 GMT
I must be old… when I was a waitress (five years) at a family type place (Shoneys) standard was always 10%.
I will always remember the iced tea man. He would come in everyday, have a glass or two of tea and always leave a dollar tip. I think he was a mailman.
I’m funny when I start to calculate tip in my head I start at 10% and work my way up. I have no idea why I do it that way.
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Post by Skellinton on Feb 12, 2022 2:49:26 GMT
My dad taught me 15% unless you were at a nice restaurant then 20%. I grew up in the 70’s and 80’s. I tip 20% everywhere now though.
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sassyangel
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,456
Jun 26, 2014 23:58:32 GMT
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Post by sassyangel on Feb 12, 2022 6:45:20 GMT
I tip 20%+, if I get actual bad service (not related to food quality or something beyond a servers control) it’s 15%. I started tipping when I moved here in early 2000.
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SweetieBsMom
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,785
Jun 25, 2014 19:55:12 GMT
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Post by SweetieBsMom on Feb 12, 2022 15:04:45 GMT
The dad tipped 4%. It just made me realize how long ago that was when 10% was generous and the receipt was carbon copies from the credit card imprinter. My whole life I was taught to tip minimum 20% and I'm 50 now. So I don't think that was recent thinking, but it does sound like something old people would do. Me too. I always was taught 20%. I’m 51. East coast pea
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iowgirl
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,316
Jun 25, 2014 22:52:46 GMT
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Post by iowgirl on Feb 12, 2022 15:21:54 GMT
I am a frugal tipper I guess. I tip a standard 15% usually, for an OK server. 10% or less if the server was awful (and it was not something out of their control) 20% if service was better than OK. And by OK I mean if my drink has been attended to, they are genuinely friendly and not giving a big sigh or an eye roll as they leave the table.
I also take into account how the whole place is being ran. I know some situations are out of the servers control. If they are making my experience better, in spite of how things are going in the restaurant, or at least trying to, I recognize that.
We don't have a lot of upscale places around here. It is more of a diner or bar type place. Some of the places you put in your order at the counter and then go sit down. I am not tipping 20% for that. You even pick up your plates/trays and put them on a cabinet as you leave and dump your trash. They are local places, not fast food franchise. I might leave a few dollars, but not 20% for that.
Do you all tip cash or add it to the CC bill? I mostly tip cash.
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Post by chaosisapony on Feb 12, 2022 15:46:08 GMT
I wonder if the places where 20% has been the standard for a long time are states where servers make the super low server minimum wage? Here in California they have always made the normal minimum wage; which in 2022 is $15/hour. When I worked retail we all made minimum wage and weren't tipped, we were always annoyed at going out to eat and having to tip because they made the same amount we did except they handled food instead of clothing or groceries.
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Post by katlady on Feb 12, 2022 15:54:25 GMT
I wonder if the places where 20% has been the standard for a long time are states where servers make the super low server minimum wage? Here in California they have always made the normal minimum wage; which in 2022 is $15/hour. When I worked retail we all made minimum wage and weren't tipped, we were always annoyed at going out to eat and having to tip because they made the same amount we did except they handled food instead of clothing or groceries. I thought about this too. California servers make at least minimum wage, so maybe that is why we used to tip only about 10-15%. Now, I think 15-20% is the norm. And someone asked the question about tipping in cash or credit. I like to tip in cash. Even if I pay by card, I try to leave a cash tip, for everything, even Uber/taxi drivers.
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Gennifer
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,241
Jun 26, 2014 8:22:26 GMT
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Post by Gennifer on Feb 12, 2022 16:27:42 GMT
I wonder if the places where 20% has been the standard for a long time are states where servers make the super low server minimum wage? Here in California they have always made the normal minimum wage; which in 2022 is $15/hour. When I worked retail we all made minimum wage and weren't tipped, we were always annoyed at going out to eat and having to tip because they made the same amount we did except they handled food instead of clothing or groceries. As someone who has worked both retail and in a restaurant… a restaurant is way more difficult.
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artbabe
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,408
Jun 26, 2014 1:59:10 GMT
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Post by artbabe on Feb 12, 2022 16:31:13 GMT
I was a waitress for 10 years in my teens and 20s. I'm 55 now. In central Ohio the standard tip was 15%. It went up to 20% in my 30s.
My first job I worked at (I was 16) was at a place that had mostly farmers and old people as customers. There would be 50 cents left on the table. It was maddening. I made $1.50 an hour and shared my tips with the kitchen. And scrubbed the bathrooms before I went home at night. It made me appreciate all the jobs I've had since then.
I tip 20% because it is easy to do. Move the decimal place over, double it. Easy.
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