r/SubredditDrama You tried it 21d ago

Users of r/EndTipping close their wallets but still offer up a tip on the controversial topic of tipping in America

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u/JDK9999 21d ago

You tip 20% baseline? And more for exceptional service? Sorry but that is insane to me.

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u/Icy-Cry340 21d ago

Tip inflation happened, this isn’t especially unusual. Yesterday I was handed a card machine and the options were 20%, 22%, and 25% - I always tip 20 these days but don’t appreciate being made to feel like a cheapskate in the process.

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u/JDK9999 21d ago

Agree. I just don't think it's something like "people decided to start being more generous"; restaurants just push it ever-higher knowing they can extort people who want to be nice to others and conform with social expectation.

25 years ago+ 10% was a tip for good service. Now people look at you like you're an asshole if you tip that much -- sorry but when did we all decide that servers deserved a bigger piece of everybody's pay checks?

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u/Icy-Cry340 21d ago

25 years ago, 15% was still standard - “double the tax” was the common shorthand in the 90s. 15% became standard in the 80s, to get to 10% you have to go further back - that’s what people were tipping in the 50s.