Do people in your country tip?
Do people in your country tip?
>Garret
What a gaycunt
Soyboy BTFO
only the delivery kid who brings me pizza because I'm moderately rich and wish people tipped me when I was doing that job as a teenager
Only boomers, but it will likely die out soon, thank god.
Hahahahahaha
I'm a line cook and the church goers in our diner do this too except it's with 2020 Trump dollars. Half of our waiters are magafags and it's funny that they seethe when they get one of these. One got so mad he said fuck voting for Trump. I thought it was funny that it was some random Trump dollar made he not want to vote for him.
More than anything, I find it weird that people still use cash so much in the US. Especially now that you're forced to wear masks, but then people are still fondling each other's filthy pocket money. I like watching that Gas Station Encounters channel where they show shoplifters, and it always looks super weird when they start paying for their stuff with dollar bills
kek
I don't like the whole (((tipping))) thing but I would seethe if someone used the opportunity to try and convert me to their shitty jewish religion
>can't go to the doctor because I dont have enough tip money let alone insurance
Not really, unless it's stuff that pays notoriously badly like hairdressers, or someone went through extra trouble for you. Or a tipjar where the 50 cent change that's left over goes to if you want.
I used to tip pizza delivery guys but since Uber Eats, Didi and the endless other competitors flooded the food business, I don't anymore.
The only people I tip are the ones who put your stuff in bags at the supermarket, they're mostly old people with no payment. But since quarantine I don't go anymore. Also I've reduced the amount of cash since I mostly pay with debit card, transaction and online payment.
>he not want to vote for him.
him not want to vote for trump
LMAO, I leave tracts everywhere I go.
>tip
What's the standard now (pre-covid) in America?
I was listening to a podcast and they said somebody's got a reputation of "a bad tipper" and that person was leaving 20%.
And then they said they'd usually give 50% on a small bill and if the bill is "like more than 500 bucks" they'd give a bit less (but about 200 dolliroos still)
dont know what retard you listened to but standard is 10%. 0% if the service is shit or if you dont want to tip, 15-20% if it is really good
I'd say standard is 20%. Those sound like richoids with money to throw around if they are dropping 500 buxxx on a restaurant
In the past, 18% was the norm and 20% was considered good. In the last few years, 22% is considered the new minimum. I think that trend was started my Apple's calculator tip feature. You can still not leave a tip but those people will remember you.
15-25% depending on the context/place/if I'm with a date
though since covid I unironically tip my favorite place 50%
>if I'm with a date
>though since covid I unironically tip my favorite place 50%
why?
>>if I'm with a date
just habit I guess
>>though since covid I unironically tip my favorite place 50%
I don't want them to close since it's a family run thai place and the only thai food around my little flyover shithole
not him BUT
>since corona
corona times are tuff and it never hurts to give a bit/lot extra for all those hardworking service employees.
>with a date
nobody likes a cheap date after all.
Pretty much expected to tip at least 10-15% at restaurants for basic service, but I might have just grown up in a cheap family that hates tipping. You even tip for haircuts and other services.
Lel if there's anything I've learned from watching the American electorate, it's how shallow the reasons are for their votes sometimes.
Tipping in general is retarded but tipping based off of the price of the meal is nonsensical. Why should the server be paid more for bringing out a more expensive dish? It's the same shit. They carry out a fucking plate.
why should an expensive dish cost more? it doesn't make you more full
more expensive components
more demanding preparation
you're so close to understanding user
why does a glass of the same wine cost more in a more expensive restaurant? why can chefs with three michelin stars charge more for meals that use the same ingredients?
shouldn't he tip the chef then?
>tipping
>ever
We're not the states where waitresses get paid $2.50 an hour. Don't tip people because they can carry your food from a kitchen to a table.
I don't think that those higher prices are justified.
>50%
what the fuck?
A better service isn't directly proportional to the price of your food
This is the only way I tip when I visit America.
>not putting the syrup all over the glass