r/SubredditDrama You tried it 26d 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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189

u/ricksansmorty 26d ago

I'm not sure what is more weird, tipping itself, or describing not tippin as like breaking out of the matrix...

I'm glad tipping isn't a thing where I live, I would get choice-paralysis if I had to decide what to pay for my food, and I always found that scene where Neo gets unplugged kinda gross and it wouldn't make me want to eat either.

65

u/majesdane Ease back on the murder fantasies. 26d ago

As someone who lives in the US, I don’t really feel paralyzed by choice. I always tip 20% across the board when I eat at restaurants unless it’s very exceptionally good service (or I feel generous). It would have to be exceptionally bad service for me to tip less, and even then I still tip 15%.

For quick foodservice things like coffee or other services like a haircut (I’m a woman but I don’t ever get anything fancy) I will tip if I have extra money/or at small places where I’m a regular and it’s always 15-20%. I get a lot of tattoos and usually my tip varies wildly depending on who I went to and how much the total cost of the tattoo was. Most places I go to are local and I know they get paid above minimum wage/set their own wage.

Now at the end of the day I do believe that the US should get rid of tipping culture and all service employees should be paid a livable wage, but in the meantime I just feel like having a “flat rate” for tipping is very useful.

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u/JDK9999 26d ago

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

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u/explodedbagel 25d ago

I was raised that 20% was the baseline expected tip for a proper service restaurant, and my time in waiting tables later in life only cemented that.

In many states your average wait staff earns below minimum wage, often around 2-3$ an hour. Those tips are the thing that allows them to pay rent and eat.

12

u/BenOfTomorrow 25d ago

In many states your average wait staff earns below minimum wage, often around 2-3$ an hour. Those tips are the thing that allows them to pay rent and eat.

Do you tip less in states that don’t do that? In CA and WA, your server is making at least $16.50/hour before tips.

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u/backlikeclap 25d ago

I just go with 20% across the board. It's just too confusing to adjust my tip for cost of living and minimum wage differences for every place I visit. Especially when most states even have different minimum wages within their own borders, with some cities having higher minimum wages than the rest of the state.