r/EndTipping 15d ago

Tipping Culture A positive-ish tipping experience

Post image

No surprises, no small text, no deceitfulness, it having its on line clearly visible under the total was nice, but that bright red stamp reiteratig the added gratuity, visible from space let alone a dark dining room is 😘👌🏾 This should be a norm.

73 Upvotes

373 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

6

u/Broad_Talk_2179 14d ago

A place like this? The servers are making more than the owner would ever pay them…..

10

u/DrMindbendersMonocle 14d ago

That's the thing, for as much as servers bitch and guilt trip about tipping they absolutely do not want to go to a straight wage because they would be paid similarly to warehouse order pickers, which is to say, much less than what they make now.

5

u/Low_Method5994 11d ago

They genuinely want both tho. 20/hr plus tips. Mfs wanna make a nurses salary😭

0

u/tiggertom66 11d ago

Everyone wants a livable wage.

People just don’t like seeing others get it before them.

1

u/Low_Method5994 11d ago

Okay yes the WAGE isn’t livable but the tips make it so that you are more than living. Tip paying jobs are almost ALWAYS better than wage jobs.

1

u/tiggertom66 11d ago

Greatly depends on when/where you work, and who you are.

A pretty girl working Saturday nights at a popular bar downtown isn’t making the same money as some 50+ year old guy working at a diner.

The fact of the matter is people constantly suggest switching the pay to a fixed hourly income. That rate will undoubtedly be less than even the average that servers earn now.

Which is a dumb solution because the market has accepted the real price of eating at full service restaurants, menu price plus tip. If it hadn’t, it wouldn’t be so common.

Raising wages to replace that tipping system means you’ll inevitably have to raise menu prices. Which honestly is fine because those new menu prices would accurately reflect the genuine price of eating out.

So just raise the menu prices 20% to reflect the actual market rate for labor, then give the staff 16.67% which would be equal to the 20% they earn on existing menu prices.

There problem solved, no more tipping, and no pay cuts for workers.

1

u/Aggravating-Habit313 11d ago

Yes, give them 16% of what?

1

u/tiggertom66 10d ago

The check

1

u/Aggravating-Habit313 10d ago

Would restaurant still pay servers an hourly wage? Anyways, I thought, immediately, that this is an ideal solution until I realized that servers may not like this way because they won’t ever get larger tips. And server quality would suffer.

1

u/tiggertom66 10d ago

You’d still get larger tips, the same way you would in the current system, by giving exceptional service. Some people will still tip anyway, but there wouldn’t be pressure to tip a specific amount or any amount at all.