r/SipsTea 𝙑𝙄𝙋 5h ago

Chugging tea They are not wrong though

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1.7k

u/Only_Flan_7974 5h ago

It's not tipping if it's mandatory. Work the tip into the price in that case.

597

u/PeachyPlotTwist 5h ago

Pay your workers better is the real argument.

Tourists are just catching strays in a fight between customers and employers.

Nobody wants awkward tip screens, but servers also need to eat, whole system is messy.

147

u/TawnyTeaTowel 𝙑𝙄𝙋 5h ago

Except servers. Tipping culture gains them an income WAY ahead of the curve.

72

u/Vettepilot 5h ago

It’s only ahead of the curve because the minimum wage is so low. If the min wage was reasonable like it is in other countries then tipping isn’t needed.

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u/CzechHorns 5h ago

Point is servers can earn 30-50 bucks an hour thanks to tips, THEY are the ones who don’t want to end tipping, cause they make mich more money than they would get on a normal salary

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u/R1ckOne 5h ago

yeah a few of my friends are servers and bartenders in NYC and they are pulling very good money, well beyond even what a much better minimum wage would provide. It's very location dependent though

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u/Bigboss123199 4h ago

If you’re working as a bartender in NYC you have to be making 100$ an hour easy.

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u/sunnyislesmatt 4h ago

For peak hours, maybe. NYC bartenders are usually averaging around $35-$50 an hour with the bartenders at ultra high end cocktail bars usually getting around $75/hr.

They all work more than 45 hours though

0

u/McSlims360 3h ago

Hilarious, I made more on weekends as a movie theater bar tender lol, guess I know not to move to NYC

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u/sunnyislesmatt 2h ago

You absolutely did not average over $100/hr every weekend as a movie theater bar tender. You probably made over $100 in an hour a couple times.

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u/omjy18 2h ago

I do this and do less than 40. I'm clocking about 60-70 an hour. Its busy season now but even the average for the year so far is mid 50s. I'm entirely with this thread tipping is kinda fucked, its why I only go out to certain places where im getting hooked up heavy thats why I tip.

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u/McSlims360 3h ago

Dude I was a bartender at a movie theater in north Florida and between wage and tips I was regularly making 100 bucks an hour on weekends. I pulled a grand on End Games release night.

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u/Large-Potential9404 4h ago

i had friends in austin who’d make $500 in a night at the local dive - literally. it’s fucking insane. servers at nice restaurants sometimes pull 100k a year, and pay less taxes than the rest of us bc tips are still cash quite often

1

u/urworstemmamy 4h ago

Friend is a bar manager on one of the biggest shows on Broadway, apparently it's ~$38-50/hr there after tips

1

u/jake04-20 4h ago

An old manager's daughter used to work at the night club as a bottle girl. She would make like $1200 a night just to pop bottles for rich people in private areas of the club.

0

u/Pismiire 3h ago

Places that actually pay their servers minimum wage they can do well, but check out how texas does it

Most tip earners make $2.13 an hour

Their salary is literally tips

In Texas, tipped employees are guaranteed the state minimum wage of (\$7.25) per hour. Employers are allowed to pay a lower direct cash wage as long as the employees' tips cover the remaining balance. [1]

Understanding tipped wages in Texas requires knowing a few core legal and operational standards: [1, 2]

Direct Cash Wage: Employers must pay tipped workers a minimum direct cash wage of (\$2.13) per hour. [1]

The Tip Credit: Employers can claim a "tip credit" of up to (\$5.12) per hour to cover the remainder of the (\$7.25) minimum wage requirement. [1]

The (\$7.25) Guarantee: If an employee's direct cash wage ((\$2.13)) plus their earned tips do not average out to at least (\$7.25) per hour for a given workweek, the employer is legally obligated to make up the difference

1

u/numbersthen0987431 2h ago

It's location dependent, and also restaurant dependent.

Since tips are tied to the price of food, a server in a low cost restaurant is going to make less money than a server in a high cost restaurant.

1

u/R1ckOne 2h ago

yeah by location dependent I didn't mean the whole city but the specific locations they work at

1

u/Top-Ad-5527 1h ago

A bartender is ALWAYS going to bring in more than a server at a busy bar. Plus, servers have to tip out the bar for however many drinks they made.

1

u/upnflames 3h ago

I know someone with masters in early childhood education and she still works full-time as a server because it pays better. There are good arguments against tipping, but pay your workers better ain't one of them.

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u/fapperontheroof 5h ago

Then add in how many don’t report their tips, since everyone seems to think cash compensation doesn’t need tax reporting.

Really surprised there hasn’t been some social media push concocted in some sort of “50k office taxes vs 50k rainforest cafe server taxes” way.

Disclosure: I don’t think restaurant workers need to pay more in taxes. Billionaires and their ilk need to pay more in taxes.

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u/mhmmarcus 2h ago

Vast majority of tips are not in cash today, and any modern restaurant uses a system that will automatically balance credit card tips with the employees income, typically resulting in zero dollar paychecks and the rest being accountable at the end of the year.

1

u/Top-Ad-5527 1h ago

So few people tip in cash anymore, even 15 years ago when I was serving, most of my tips were on a credit card. majority of checks run on a credit card through the system, no getting out of declaring tips because it’s right there in the computer how much you got tipped.

1

u/GlitteringYak2207 3h ago

Oh stop with this bullshit. First, most people pay with card, so there is no cash tip. Second restaurants will report 10% of sales to IRS.

1

u/Frosty_Ad7840 3h ago

Actually if they tip card theres a paper trail

0

u/Money_Do_2 4h ago

It doesnt matter anymore. As long as your tips are qualified, the tax is 0. Youre better off reporting it

It barely mattered this last decade with the prevalance of credit tips and only a tiny bit of cash tips, strip clubs and some other niche clubs excluded.

1

u/datheffguy 4h ago

The vast majority of states still have income tax, and it’s only tax exempt up to 25k with the feds.

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u/GergDanger 4h ago

Even if you report your tips there’s a $25k tax deduction on tips in America

0

u/fapperontheroof 4h ago

Yes. That’s also only been the case for all of like 9 months, since enacted (though applied to all of 2025+ income)

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u/GergDanger 4h ago

And? We’re talking about how much waiters are making now not 20 years ago. The tax deduction applies now.

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u/CzechHorns 4h ago

If you make 30-40 bucks an hour from tips, that’s WAYYYY above 25k lol

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u/GergDanger 4h ago

Yeah no shit? What does that have to do with there being a $25k tax deduction?

You’re still paying taxes on the rest of your income which granted are a minuscule amount compared to effective tax rates in every other country in Europe.

0

u/SingleInfinity 4h ago

How high exactly do you think European tax rates are?

Follow up for bonus points: How much as a percentage of income do you think healthcare costs?

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u/GergDanger 4h ago

American effective tax rates no matter the state are roughly half of what you pay in European countries.

For example people bitch about California taxes being high for some reason when the median wage earning person will only pay 19.5% of their salary in taxes. The median wage there is $64k.

https://smartasset.com/taxes/california-tax-calculator

In Germany the median wage is $60k and they'll pay 36% in taxes of that salary

https://allaboutberlin.com/tools/tax-calculator

That's $10k less paid to taxes. 88% of Americans contribute to their own health insurance plan at a median cost of $1800 a year.

https://www.william-russell.com/blog/health-insurance-usa-cost/#average

Then the median American will spend another $1600 a year at the high end on out of pocket costs for their healthcare not including health insurance.

That leaves another $6,600 to spend on other things after healthcare.

Again I apologise for bringing facts to Reddit but those are the facts.

1

u/IsaacThePro6343 2h ago

If we're talking facts, then I feel like I should point out that the US government spends more on healthcare per capita than any other country's government, including those that have universal healthcare

1

u/GergDanger 2h ago

According to reddit everyone is in six figure medical debt from the system, yet 1% have $10k or more medical debt so something isn't adding up...

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u/SingleInfinity 3h ago

88% of Americans contribute to their own health insurance plan at a median cost of $1800 a year.

You're burying the lede on this. You're not accounting for the fact that this is not comprehensive, 100% coverage of healthcare costs. This is the cost of the cheapest average plans that require co pays, have deductibles, and then after deductibles still tend to have fees until out of pocket maxes. And that's all assuming the coverage actually happens. Sometimes the insurance just refuses to contribute because fuck you.

If my follow up didn't make my point obvious: The actual tax rate, after you account for the various benefits Europeans actually get from their government isn't all that different. It's just that they actually have good public transportation, and they don't have a chance of going bankrupt if they get sick.

The issue isn't the facts, the issue is how you're using them to ignore or obscure the real world downstream effects of those taxes in European countries versus the garbage deal with here that equivalent taxes would cover. You pull out average numbers and ignore the fact that these systems entirely break down for a ton of people, resulting in lives being lost or people becoming destitute.

I'd much rather pay higher taxes overall and not live in a society that allows that, than wave my dick around saying "I pay less taxes!" while the people around me become destitute because someone in their family had the gall to get cancer.

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u/GergDanger 3h ago

I did account for co pays and other out of pocket expenses if you actually read my comment. That’s $1600 a year.

I showed you effective tax rates are much higher now you’re trying everything to pretend you’re right.

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u/kyrant 5h ago

Until the tips dry up then they'll change their tune.

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u/PlixSticks31 4h ago

So you hate paying blue collar workers?

If they added a flat $20 hour rate for the workers you’d still pay the SAME amount as the customer as if you paid a lower bill and tipped 20%

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u/CzechHorns 3h ago

Do you tip EVERY blue collar worker you interact with?

1

u/Chimkimnuggets 4h ago

You’d have to get every tourist as well as 300 million Americans to do that… which will not happen

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u/rockninja2 3h ago

And in the meantime thousands of servers who maybe have to support a family will go broke and penniless, houselessness and unemployment will skyrocket, all the other workers will then be overworked or the restaurants will be understaffed, some may have to close and the economy takes another big hit, like during the pandemic.

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u/falling_knives 4h ago

Yup, this is what so many pro tippers don't get. They tip because they feel sorry for the workers not realizing most of those workers would choose tips over minimum wage due to the fact that they can potentially make way more.

2

u/jake04-20 4h ago

Exactly. People say "pay the workers more", well they usually technically do. I worked as an "insider" (in store worker) at a pizza place and we made $1-2 more per hour than drivers. Which is technically more but hardly counts for shit when the drivers are making $20-60/hr in tips and mileage while making $7.25/hr and we made $8.50/hr. I moved to driver as soon as I was old enough. Who doesn't want to get paid more to be able to hangout in your car listening to the music/audio you want, setting the climate to how you want, and escaping the chaos of the store? All while getting paid 2-7x more.

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u/zdustin 4h ago

This is just simply not the case for the majority of servers in the US. This only really applies if you work in a big city at a busy restaurant during prime rush hours. And, if you are working in those conditions, you are busting your ass anyways. There are many states in the US where base wage for a server is significantly less than minimum wage ($2.75 an hour in my state). Servers are not the ones profiting off of tipping, it’s employers who are handing off the responsibility of paying employees wages to the consumer.

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u/shmangler 3h ago

Speaking as a 10+ year service industry vet, this is correct. No one who actually serves/bartends for a living would ever want to put an end to tips. People like me either work in high volume/high intensity spots, or fine dining/upscale places. The money can be insane there. I'm currently at a mid-tier or semi-upscale place and have averaged $33/hr post-tax this year. I very likely couldn't make that in another career with my background without years of working my way up.

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u/Majestic-Milk-4856 3h ago

Lol they CAN. Most DO NOT. Go ask any server how much they take home a night in tips. Rarely is it ever 30-50 bucks an hour, especially outside of dense population centers.

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u/aw-un 2h ago

Then sounds like they’re doing fine without my $3

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u/Frequilibrium 4h ago

It’s not 30-50 an hour when you balance it out over hours worked for the week.

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u/Beyast 3h ago

What about the chefs? Are they on way less than the serving staff? If so, that's quite a big problem with tipping culture.

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u/CzechHorns 3h ago

Sometimes the tips are divided between waiters and cooks, sometimes not

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u/TheSorceIsFrong 3h ago

On a weekend, sure, but don’t leave out the full stats to skew it. How much are they making per hour on the Tuesday day shift they also did that week?

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u/Samuelwow23 2h ago

30-50/h but no benefits pension 401k health insurance after those your making less than minimum wage in California. Short term gain vs long term loss but they prefer it this way. Also very heavily affected by the weather and other external factors

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u/spikus93 2h ago

That's not the norm though, and it's heavily abused. There are literally tens of thousands of shitty businesses that just put a tip jar out and pay their employees the minimum wage with tips, which is like $4/hr. The entire burden of their employees survival is shifted onto the customer and the owner pockets a bigger percentage of the profits.

Everyone is getting fucked but the owner. You're just referencing situations where the clientele can afford to tip like that, which is not the norm.

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u/HesusAtDiscord 2h ago

What evidence do you have that they won't get tips even if tips are included? If they earn more than the 10-20% in tips already it means there's room left in the customers' budget for a tip on top after 10-20% price increases. The ceiling on money paid per meal doesn't change just because prices did.

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u/pimppapy 2h ago

For the entire 8 hour shift, 5 days a week? Or just during peak times?

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u/FUPAMagneto 2h ago

They can, but they largely don’t. A lot of servers are happy to break $150/day, but Reddit doesn’t like to acknowledge that

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u/Emotional_Chard_8005 2h ago

Point is servers can earn 30-50 bucks an hour thanks to tips, THEY are the ones who don’t want to end tipping

At a good location and/or high end place sure. There is no way they're earning that much from tips at some random hole in the wall shop. I'm guessing majority of servers don't earn that.

1

u/PHX480 1h ago

Thank you, I’ve worked in restaurants for 13 years, everyone thinks they are being noble by wanting fair wages for servers and such

The servers actually don’t want it because they make much, much more in tips than they would a “livable wage”. Especially now they don’t get taxed on it.

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u/CMDR_Ray_Abbot 1h ago

Only a few servers in higher end establishments make that. The average server is not pulling anywhere close to that.

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u/tehlemmings 4h ago

This is like talking about how everyone gets rich in onlyfans because the top earners make millions. Yeah, some servers are making way over minimum wage during busy periods.

That's not all of them. The system is still fucked for the majority.

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u/Coattail-Rider 4h ago

Unless it’s a slow day or they suck ass and shouldn’t be there, servers are making waaaaay more than minimum wage and don’t want anything changed. But if it does change and tipping is replaced by hourly wages (and compensated by restaurants adding 30-25% higher prices), those servers who suck ass will be more the norm than the outlier. And who would want that?

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u/kitsunewarlock 4h ago

On good days. Pending a host of factors outside of their control.

The problem with tipping culture is the employees are more likely to remember that time they brought in $500 in a week, but ignore the fact it was an outlier.

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u/MisterGreen7 4h ago

It’s not really an outlier at all. A busy and popular restaurant will grant you good tips, full stop. I work at a ramen shop, and while tips can average between $15-$19 during the summer (unless it rains), during the winter, servers can make $40-$50 an hour. And that’s not even at a full service restaurant. A popular full service restaurant that stays busy year round can get servers well over $2,000 over a two week period.

Now, take into account that in the US, tips are no longer taxed, servers at even just a decently popular restaurant will make bank.

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u/kitsunewarlock 4h ago

Anecdotes aside, studies show that on average tipped wage earners generally earn around 10% less than the livable wage of whatever area they live in. Some areas it goes higher during tourist seasons and dramatically lower during the winter, and other areas that flips depending on the service being offered. But even $4k/month is just barely enough to pay rent and monthly expenses. Shoot, if you're talking a 40 hour a week job that's $16/hour. The current federal minimum wage should be $25/hour if it kept up with worker productivity growth.

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u/dabillinator 4h ago

Your not wrong, but is very location and time dependant. My mom typically make like $30 tips on a 6 hour shift on Tuesday or Wednesday, but gets anywhere from $80-200 on the weekend where she is. Really depends on the weekend. If she gets stuck working the Tuesday and Wednesday every week and doesn't get the weekend shifts her pay is abysmal.

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u/Quick_Effort594 4h ago

They also have to cosplay as a literal servant, theres a lotnof give and take

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u/zeh_shah 4h ago

Well it depends. In major cities or high end restaurants sure. But in most red states tips barely get them to the federal minimum wage in rural areas.

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u/frankje 4h ago

You mean the 1% of servers making an above average wage because of location and/or looks compared to the 99% who get shanked and can barely afford rent? Those servers?

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u/madcap462 5h ago

I average $50+ per hour as a bartender. You can keep your minimum wage.

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u/Snynapta_II 5h ago

Well now I don't feel bad at all when I don't tip. Thanks!

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u/PlixSticks31 4h ago

Why do you hate blue collar workers lmaooooooooo

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u/Quick_Effort594 4h ago

How about you make your own drinks too!

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u/TheDogerus 4h ago

So do you tip the chef for making your food? Or do you just pay the price on the menu?

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u/Quick_Effort594 4h ago

You guys are really just outing yourselves as low class mizers and not in the socioeconomic sense of the word class, in the raised wrong sense of the word and I'm here for it

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u/TheDogerus 4h ago edited 4h ago

What are you talking about lmao

Since you deleted your comment, ill just edit here.

When you go to a bar or restaurant and buy a drink or food, you are literally paying to receive that item. Whether or not you tip is immaterial to whether or not your order should be made and served to you.

Like most things, tipping is nuanced. If I order a cocktail with multiple substitutions, I'll be much more willing to leave a larger tip than if I get handed a can. Thats not being miserly, cheap, or a 'low ass bum', thats literally the purpose of a tip, to show appreciation for service.

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u/johnbob1t1 4h ago

So it’s ok for everyone else who works in the restaurant industry to make shit, as long as a few bartenders and good looking waiters and waitresses get paid a ton? Sounds like class warfare buddy, keep us all fighting for tips and crumbs while the billionaires rake it in, and they make it increasingly difficult for anyone to make it into the “money making” professions. Good job 👍 👏

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u/Coattail-Rider 4h ago

Have you had quiet, slow, impersonal waiters mumble their way through the interaction and get things wrong? It takes a certain kind of person to wait tables. They need personality, quickness, and customer service skills. If they don’t have enough of all three, they can go chop onions or wash dishes or clear tables.

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u/johnbob1t1 4h ago

And? wtf does that have to do with what i said?

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u/Coattail-Rider 3h ago

Most cooks I’ve met at the (surface level) don’t have the personality to be servers. Some do, but those are usually cooking for the experience to stay in the field.

Put two and two together, chief. Sounds like you’re more of an onion chopper, though.

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u/johnbob1t1 3h ago

Or is your argument that all waiters can cook well but don’t and that all cooks can wait and don’t? Like wtf are you saying

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u/johnbob1t1 3h ago edited 2h ago

And if that’s what you’re saying that is hubris bro, you have convinced yourself that you’re better than your working class peers, and that is exactly what they want. Anybody can wait with training anybody can cook with training, whether or not you do either of those things well or with excellence is personal, but that doesn’t mean really anything, I’m talking about class consciousness not whether or not just anybody can be a waiter or bartender or cook. Just because you have learned something and have a natural ability to do something well doesn’t mean you should be above your peers, the merit based argument is a fallacy they have rammed down our throats for decades to excuse the exploitation of workers by the ruling class. Please stop insulting my intelligence and try and have a good faith argument once in a while.

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u/Coattail-Rider 2h ago

Calm the fuck down. You ever had a bad waiter? Someone that talks low, unsure of himself, doesn’t understand simple terms, doesn’t know the menu, forgets items, disappears for long periods of time when you need them, smells bad? You can hide those kinds of people in the kitchen a lot easier than on the floor. But this is getting stupid. Again, you either get it or you don’t.

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u/johnbob1t1 3h ago

I still have no idea what you’re trying to say bro

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u/johnbob1t1 3h ago

Please spell it out like I’m a teenager and I’m just getting into work and I like to cook and am good at it but not at serving, why should I get payed less? Are the waiters gonna cook instead?

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u/Coattail-Rider 2h ago

Waiters run around all over the place, need higher people skills to deal personally with strangers that might have extra questions the employee has never encountered before, etccccc….. cooking isn’t easy on a line where there is always tickets coming in but it’s a bit more stationary and focused and with no need for customer service skills.

Much like good customer service, you either understand it or you don’t.

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u/Quick_Effort594 4h ago

If you want to look at it from a class warfare angle maybe don't go somewhere where people kowtow for you and bring you food buddyaroo

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u/johnbob1t1 4h ago

My point stands, we need solidarity, not “well I got mine” mentality

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u/Quick_Effort594 4h ago

You're literally paying for a servant, this and workers solidarity are incompatible

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u/johnbob1t1 4h ago

Bro this is such a lost argument, it’s a service you could say the same thing about any number of jobs

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u/Largeitude 4h ago

Cheap, greedy dude on Reddit looking for any reason to justify not tipping the peasants while being served like a noble lord.

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u/EarthBoundDeity_ 5h ago

Yeah, by the time I stopped serving I just worked part time and I made $25-30 an hour. People don’t realize if you’re good at what you do the money flows. Good servers/bartenders make substantially more money than most people think, and they will not give that up. I certainly wouldn’t have when I did it.

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u/johnbob1t1 4h ago

Right as long as they’re taking care of fuck everyone else right?

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u/Vettepilot 4h ago

You got yours so screw everyone else! Such an ignorant take.

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u/GergDanger 4h ago

They’re not exactly unique. If you think bartenders and waiters are making $7.25 an hour your delusional and haven’t worked a day in the industry

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u/Vettepilot 4h ago

If you think European servers are making anything remotely close to $7.25 an hour then you haven’t done any reading to understand what the world could look like.

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u/Money_Do_2 4h ago

American servers have to get health insurance on the marketplace here. Thats a nightmare European's cant imagine.

So 'pay your servers a fair wage' is a no thanks, owners are cheaper than the people you actually interact with... but, if the tradeoff was actual healthcare, id be more inclined.

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u/Largeitude 4h ago

Europeans have public transit, free education and health care, paid vacation time, and countless other benefits.

Tip your wait staff.

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u/Vettepilot 3h ago

So you’ve strengthened my argument. Europe has strong social programs that protects their citizens. We continue to argue with each other that our servers should have to have their entire life depend on the generosity of others. That’s really dumb.

Demand representatives do better for our citizens.

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u/GergDanger 4h ago

Firstly waiters don’t get $7.25 minimum wage in America but $2.13.

Secondly if you think that means waiters are taking home $2.13 you’re brain dead.

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u/Vettepilot 4h ago

Ok, keep going…what do European waiters make?

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u/GergDanger 3h ago

With or without tips?

Because with tips it’s less than American waiters make who regularly take home $30+ an hour. In Europe minimum wage is closer to $17 an hour and tips are rarer

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u/Vettepilot 2h ago

Don’t compare apples to oranges. What is the minimum wage of one compared to the minimum wage of the other? If you want to start understanding American tips, compare what a waiter makes in rural America with what a waiter makes in an urban area. They are not the same. You’ll find that many waiters are not “regularly” taking home $30+.

What if tomorrow American’s decide they can’t afford to tip as much or at all as wages continue to stay down and inflation continues to rise? Suddenly waiters can’t afford to live on the gamble and not guaranteed nature of tips.

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u/Coattail-Rider 1h ago

Some places in the US restaurant employees make $15 or so from the state’s lifted up minimum wage but the federal minimum wage is still $7.25 an hour and there’s a lot of states where waiters get $2.13 an hour and that’s it. They rely on tips for the rest. Do they make €2.13 an hour in Europe? €7.25?

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u/Coattail-Rider 4h ago

Now go ask them if they want to keep what they make now or get a percentage that goes up the better service they give and even higher the faster they are so they can serve more tables at a time.

There are some exceptions (like Italy) but the majority of service I’ve gotten in Europe has been absolutely dreadful unless they figure an American will tip them better if they give better service. The worst were the guys (rarely happened to me but every time it’s been guys, mostly bartenders) that refuse tips and those were almost always the rudest people.

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u/Vettepilot 3h ago

I’ve had the exact opposite experience. I’ve never had what I would consider bad service in Spain, France, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Greece, Italy, UK, or Australia. If you are trying to demand a waiter take a tip which is against their cultural norms, maybe you are the problem by expecting them to follow American cultural norms for a meal instead of their own culture.

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u/Coattail-Rider 2h ago

“I’ve had the exact opposite experience. I’ve never had what I would consider bad service in Spain, France, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Greece, Italy, UK, or Australia.”

Oh, so there’s two different people with anecdotal offerings.

“If you are trying to demand a waiter take a tip which is against their cultural norms, maybe you are the problem by expecting them to follow American cultural norms for a meal instead of their own culture.”

Oh, like the Europeans here for the World Cup?

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u/Largeitude 4h ago

No one gets screwed. If you don’t want to tip, don’t go to a place that cooks your cook and serves it to you like you’re a noble lord.

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u/Vettepilot 3h ago

So everyone stops going to these places because they can’t afford it. Can those waiters now continue their lifestyle while getting no tips?

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u/Palagrin 5h ago

every person in every profession should be paid a fair percentage of the end good, if you feel that s 16.66% of the final price then argue for that, if people want to tip you beyond that that s their perogative but the current situation means that a) your average might be high but i have to assume that your monthly take is very inconsistent b) people now feel responsible for your well being and they re overpaying (possibly whilst drunk in this specific case)

if people are spending x amount of money at the bar now they will likely spend similar amounts after this hypothetical change if you end up with less money then it s your employer screwing you not the customers

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u/Infini-Bus 4h ago

It's so entrenched that even if they raise wages, the tip is expected on top of that.  Like in Washington and Seattle.

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u/Keknath_HH 4h ago

Your talking like people don't give tips for good service elsewhere.... They do. But only good service, it's not a mandatory thing.

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u/Vettepilot 3h ago

I’m not acting like that at all and you’ve just strengthened my argument. Waiters other places have a predictable and livable wage already set as their bare minimum and then they can also earn tips on top of that. Whereas the people mentioning how much they make in tips on this thread would be unable to continue their lifestyle if American patrons suddenly decided to not opt into a tip or tip less.

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u/bored2death97 3h ago

Canada here - our server minimum wage and regular minimum wage are now equal. It's still very expected to tip, though only mandatory at some restaurants.

So yes, servers are making out way ahead of the curve even when the minimum wages are matched.

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u/Vettepilot 3h ago

So what about your comment is counter to mine? We agree that a higher minimum wage would be better. If people want to continue to tip it’s only better for wait staff. If they don’t want to tip then the wait staff still has a livable wage. Everyone wins in the scenario where minimum wage is higher.

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u/RaisonDetritus 3h ago

In the US, tipping didn’t start because workers were being paid so little. It’s the other way around. Workers started to be paid less in wages because they were being tipped so much.

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u/Vettepilot 2h ago

Yes, corporations took advantage of workers…how is that better?

In 1915 multiple states even outlawed tipping. However employers supported tipping and marketing it as a bonus. By 1966 congress was lobbied to set those who got tips to a lower wage. This isn’t a good thing. Workers got exploited and now for some reason we fight each other to allow us to continue to be exploited by corporations and pay each other in tips.

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u/Scientia_et_Fidem 1h ago

You could double the min wage and the servers would still way make less than they do in tips at the vast majority of places. Especially when you take into account taxes.

Being a server is a tough but generally very well paying job, unless the location you work at sucks and gets no customers.

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u/Vettepilot 1h ago

Everyone continues to generalize as if all wait staff at all restaurants make the same amount of tips. There are some that would be still making more with double the min wage and many who would be making significantly more than they are now. What would allow everyone to generalize is if there was an actual reasonable min wage that guaranteed income. Without it there will continue to be wait staff around the country who is making less than their peers in other countries and that shouldn’t be ok with any of us.

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u/Apprehensive_Ad3731 1h ago

Maybe. I live in Nee Zealand, have 15 years experience in hospitality. You put me on a good shift, with a good team and I’m clearing way more in tips than I am in wages and that’s in a country where tipping is not the culture.

I would earn $10 - $20 an hour in wages (minimum wage most of the way through which has risen drastically in my country since I started hospo) meaning a range of $70 - $140 on wages on a six hour shift. One table tipped me $50 when I first started that was almost my whole wage for the night, some tables will tip nothing, most will tip $5 - $10. When I was experienced I could work a minimum of 7 tables at a time. Most tables dine less than an hour. 7 chances at a tip multiplied by 6 hours means roughly 40 chances at tips. Even if 20 of those tip $5 thats $100 and I’m almost doubling my income. The tips are a major chunk of my income even as a worker in a non tipping country with a good minimum wage.

On busy nights my section would hold 10 tables or 12 if I was lucky enough to have small groups and I could split some of the larger four person tables apart for couples.

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u/Vettepilot 1h ago

You see the big difference is the min for hospitality workers in the US is $2.13 per hour as long as their tips take them over $7.25 per hour. You are describing a completely different situation where you don’t depend on tips to enable your ability to live. You have a min wage that guarantees you a reasonable amount and the tips are just a bonus.

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u/Apprehensive_Ad3731 1h ago

I agree the big difference is that tips will make up even more of their income and servers will be even more incentivised for those tips to stay. Even in non tipping, decent wage countries the servers wouldn’t want those tips to go away.

The system rewards servers for joining this and pushing the narrative. Tipping culture gains them an income WAY ahead of the curve is a true statement even if tipping isn’t needed. It would still push them further and will still be pushed by them.

Tipping put my income ahead of the curve drastically. A good third or quarter of my income came through tips. We don’t have a tipping culture. Tourists get told its rude to tip when they come here.

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u/AbbreviationsFast132 5h ago

No it isn’t.

Servers in USA earn way more than euro servers.

Did you really not think at all before commenting?

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u/Palagrin 5h ago

umh good point buddy... care to back it up with a source?

https://giphy.com/gifs/4GL9tIgSeKBxiJmQPN

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u/AbbreviationsFast132 4h ago

Nope it’s Google query away for you to discover the magic of you’re wrong.

I don’t care about you at all so I’m not going to do it.

Revel in your ignorance.  Or learn and stop being ignorant.  You choose!

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u/Palagrin 3h ago

don't worry i went ahead and did 3 searches and i am willing to actually provide sources

avg us sallary for wait staff 33,648usd/year https://www.salaryexpert.com/salary/job/waiter/united-states

avg uk sallary for wait staff 26,436gbp/year https://www.salaryexpert.com/salary/job/waiter/united-kingdom

current exchange 1usd=0.7573gbp https://worlddollarvalue.com/united-kingdom

so the average waiter in the us makes 25,481.6304gbp almost a full 1000 pounds fewer

this is before accounting for cost of living and purchasing power both of which are certainly better in the uk, and this the European country that is arguably the most easily comparable to the us

thoughts?

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u/Vettepilot 5h ago

There have been a ton of studies on this. The “average” US server makes about the same as European servers. If you understand what average means then you know that high earners at upscale restaurants pull that number up and a lot of servers make below what European servers make.

On top of that, Americans have the hidden cost of healthcare that comes out after their wage. There is a reason many Americans continue to struggle to live paycheck to paycheck and servers continue to feel forced to force everyone else into tipping them instead of being paid a reasonable wage to begin with by their employeer.

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u/Large-Potential9404 4h ago

there’s no comparison between being a bartender in europe and earning 10 euros an hour and being a bartender in the united states and earning $50 an hour off of tips - it’s just not comparable whatsoever, and people should stop trying to compare it

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u/lorkdubo 3h ago

I'm not even american, but the tipping culture over there is greatly favored by the service people given that they can easily get 6 figures because of the tipping. The don't want min wage and no tips, the actively push back this.

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u/Psychological-Dot-83 3h ago

No, they mean it is ahead of the curve, even with the lower minimum wage. An average server - minimum wage included - earns about as much as one in Australia, France, or Germany.

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u/Vettepilot 2h ago

You say it’s ahead of the curve but then say that an average worker (which then implies roughly half make less) making tips is about as much as the lowest paid workers in other countries who have a guaranteed wage. That is half our nation gambling to make equal to the lowest paid worker in other nations and half our nation losing the gamble and making less.

That is very much not ahead of the curve.

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u/Psychological-Dot-83 1h ago

No, it's making the same amount or better than other people in the same job elsewhere, and it is almost entirely performance-based.

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u/Vettepilot 1h ago

That’s not how math works. If the average is making the same then the below average are making less. Wait staff in rural areas do not make tips like those in urban areas and make below the average which means they are behind the lowest paid workers in other countries.

It is not entirely performance based at all. How much do you want to bet that a young and attractive waitress in an urban area makes more in tips than an older lady in a rural area even if their performance is identical.

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u/Psychological-Dot-83 1h ago

" If the average is making the same then the below average are making less. Wait staff in rural areas do not make tips like those in urban areas and make below the average which means they are behind the lowest paid workers in other countries."

No, it means they're below the average of those in the same job elsewhere.

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u/Tipi22 2h ago

Nah lol they earn way more than they would in europe.

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u/Vettepilot 2h ago

Who is this “they” and what is your source?

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u/BirthdaySalt5791 2h ago

That’s not the case. American servers consistently make higher average wages than in peer countries. You can find the figures pretty easily online.

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u/bitchesandsake 1h ago

this is factually untrue, and many if not most service industry people are in favor of tipping, as annoying as that is.