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Posted

Tipping in some countries like the US is way out of control with the entitlement of hospitality staff off the chart. Tipping should be done if you feel the service has been really good, above and beyond the usual 10% etc. that is often added to your bill regardless.

It also depends where I am. If I'm in a decent hotel and the hospitality staff are crushing the service, then fine... but if I have any doubts about the place, then I'll simply pay for each drink/food item as it is ordered and arrives, then no bill to get screwed over on.

Posted
2 hours ago, ronnie50 said:

Lowest minimum wage in the western world..in the world's biggest economy.

You're better off being unemployed I am in OZ, my wife makes about 25 American dollars $ 

Posted
1 minute ago, Harrisfan said:

Tip 87c so they get $3

I won’t eat out in America anymore.   Waiters cry if they get less than a 25% tip.

Posted
1 minute ago, Airalee said:

I won’t eat out in America anymore.   Waiters cry if they get less than a 25% tip.

I suppose burger joints are popular then

Posted
7 minutes ago, Harrisfan said:

I suppose burger joints are popular then

$30 for a burger, fries and a coke at 5 guys.   Have to stand in line to order and pay at the register and later collect your own food at the counter.    They still expect a tip.

  • Haha 1
Posted
3 minutes ago, Airalee said:

$30 for a burger, fries and a coke at 5 guys.   Have to stand in line to order and pay at the register and later collect your own food at the counter.    They still expect a tip.

Here's a tip

"Be good to your mother"

Posted
3 minutes ago, rough diamond said:

That only works if they only ever get just one tipping customer every hour!

:partytime2:

I know, it was a joke. Stupid Americans. Should pay $15

Posted
13 minutes ago, Airalee said:

$30 for a burger, fries and a coke at 5 guys.   Have to stand in line to order and pay at the register and later collect your own food at the counter.    They still expect a tip.

most expensive burger is $13.00... those fries and coke sure are exxy !!

Posted

If the service is good and the food is brought hot to the table, and the waiter follows up to see if all ok, then I don't have a problem with 20%, but I'm not going to pay 20-25% tip on a $100 bottle of wine if the waiter just opened it and left it on the table up to us to fill our glasses.

Posted
On 4/5/2025 at 2:52 PM, save the frogs said:

whats the official "laws of the land" for tipping?

 

Thais don't tip.

 

On 4/5/2025 at 2:52 PM, save the frogs said:

 

is tipping mandatory/expected?

 

It's expected in tourists areas.

 

On 4/5/2025 at 2:52 PM, save the frogs said:

 

restaurants only? hairdressers? masseuses?

does it differ in tourist spots? 

 

do you tip? usually? sometimes?  

 

 

I tip 10% for food at restaurants/pubs/cafes and haircuts. So, usually 20-40 baht or so.

 

Probably shouldn't even bother leaving a tip for food in tourist areas. They don't appreciate it. I think they only appreciate 100+

 

I give a better tip for a great massage,  usually 100 baht.

 

I never tip anyone else, ever. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Airalee said:

$2.13 is the federal minimum wage for tipper workers.

 

https://www.paycor.com/resource-center/articles/minimum-wage-tipped-employees-by-state/

Exactly. Tipping is not really the core issue in the US. The real problem is a country whose culture is revolted by any social regulations in the workplace (or anywhere else for that matter). If the waiters were paid $15 an hour - the bare minimum wage in most western countries - and then a discretionary 10% tip was left up to the customer then that would make much more sense. But it won't happen because that would be "socialist".

  • Thumbs Down 1
Posted
1 hour ago, ronnie50 said:

Exactly. Tipping is not really the core issue in the US. The real problem is a country whose culture is revolted by any social regulations in the workplace (or anywhere else for that matter). If the waiters were paid $15 an hour - the bare minimum wage in most western countries - and then a discretionary 10% tip was left up to the customer then that would make much more sense. But it won't happen because that would be "socialist".

it really depends on the location, but most waiters in any major city or college town in the US do quite well  I have had many friends and roommates who were waiters in the 90’s.  They would net $40-$80/hour for a 4 hour shift.

They lived large.

Posted
5 hours ago, Dirk Z said:

Taxi's are absurdly cheap, these guys make little money, work hard and the rates have hardly changed in the past 20 years or so.

Rates have doubled. Flagfall didn't change. 

  • Agree 1
Posted
On 4/5/2025 at 3:34 PM, FolkGuitar said:

The bottom line is that here in Thailand, a tip is just that: a gratuity.

Good point.

This is something farang don't understand. 

For a Thai, it means: tipping is not routinely expected,  not at all.  And it is not these ridiculous amounts (20 Baht, 40 Baht - for heavens sake) farangs discuss endlessly about. 

Thais tip, if they are really happy, and I mean really happy. And then,  they may tip a lot.

Examples: hairdresser quoted 100B, customer gave 200. 2 nurse helpers who treated a well-off patient over months got 100,000 B each (they saved his leg) (in my home country,  we would give 20$, 50$ would be considered a lot).

Normally, Thais don't tip at all.

Posted

I always tip the waitress or waiter at a restaurant even if it's 20 or 40 Baht, they certainly appreciate it, and they oftentimes show their appreciation. I tip when I get my haircut, I tip Panda drivers and I tip taxi drivers if they're doing a good job and are polite and personable.

 

A small tip goes a long way here and the local people could sure use the help, so why not? 

Posted
5 hours ago, Airalee said:

it really depends on the location, but most waiters in any major city or college town in the US do quite well  I have had many friends and roommates who were waiters in the 90’s.  They would net $40-$80/hour for a 4 hour shift.

They lived large.

And often even if you leave them a good tip they don't show much in the way of appreciation. I often get more appreciation for a 20 baht tip in Thailand that I do for $20 tip in the US. 

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