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Tipping at Self-Checkout Has Customers Crying 'Emotional Blackmail' (wsj.com) 293

Zero interaction with employees during a transaction no longer guarantees freedom from the moral quandary of how much to tip. From a report: Prompts to leave 20% at self-checkout machines at airports, stadiums, cookie shops and cafes across the country are rankling consumers already inundated by the proliferation of tip screens. Business owners say the automated cues can significantly increase gratuities and boost staff pay. But the unmanned prompts are leading more customers to question what, exactly, the tips are for. "They're cutting labor costs by doing self-checkout. So what's the point of asking for a tip? And where is it going?" says Ishita Jamar, a senior at American University in Washington, D.C., who has noticed more self-serve tip cues at restaurants she frequents.

Tipping researchers and labor advocates say so-called tip creep is a way for employers to put the onus for employee pay onto consumers, rather than raising wages themselves. Companies say tips are an optional thanks for a job well done. Businesses "are taking advantage of an opportunity," says William Michael Lynn, who studies consumer behavior and tip culture as a professor at Cornell University's Nolan School of Hotel Administration. "Who wouldn't want to get extra money at very little cost if you could?" Square, whose technology powers many iPad point-of-sale machines, says tipped transactions were up 17% year-over-year at full-service restaurants and 16% at quick-service restaurants in the fourth quarter of 2022.

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Tipping at Self-Checkout Has Customers Crying 'Emotional Blackmail'

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  • by slapyslapslap ( 995769 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:07PM (#63512289)
    at one of these kinds of places? Is it split by all the hourly employees? There's no guarantee it doesn't go straight to the owner. There was a local restaurant owner in my town that took all tips from his waitstaff for himself. He paid younger kids the standard minimum wage (not server wages) to wait tables and pocketed all the tip money for himself. Thankfully, he's no longer in business. But the tipping at a walk up payment screen just just angering in and of itself. Tip for what?
    • by UMichEE ( 9815976 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:29PM (#63512369)

      This kind of thing is usually illegal. Where I used to live, there was a pretty big restaurant that had to pay more than $1M because they were pooling tips with managers (also illegal) among a few other illegal practices. That having been said, the people I know that work at restaurants usually have no idea what's legal and illegal and the managers/owners usually aren't much better. It's especially problematic at the mom-and-pops shops.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        This kind of thing is usually illegal. Where I used to live, there was a pretty big restaurant that had to pay more than $1M because they were pooling tips with managers

        It's always illegal. (And it cost Starbucks over a hundred million.)

      • by cstacy ( 534252 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @07:26PM (#63512535)

        This kind of thing is usually illegal. .

        In the USA, it's not illegal. In fact, many places where you tip advertise that "all tips go directly to your server|driver|whoever" as if that's a feature.

        What is illegal is paying the below-minimum-wage rate that waiters usually get in restaurants. They must legally get their tips. (However, the tips might be pooled with the other waiters, and they just their share. However that's divvvied up.) The waiters have to report their tip income to the tax man.

        If the waiter winds up making less than minimum wage after tips, the management is required to make up the difference. (And probably fire the employee.) I never hear people mention this part of the federally required deal, and I wonder if even most waiters are aware of it.

        • "If the waiter winds up making less than minimum wage after tips, the management is required to make up the difference. (And probably fire the employee.) I never hear people mention this part of the federally required deal, and I wonder if even most waiters are aware of it."

          That's interesting.

    • I suspect the owner pocketing the tips might be illegal in some states.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        It's illegal everywhere in the US, and has been for decades. The only deduction allowable is the actual transaction cost (on the tip only) if it's paid by credit card.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        I suspect the owner pocketing the tips might be illegal in some states.

        Federal law. But that's only when they are paying the waiter the allowed below-minimum-wage hourly rate. Also, they can force the staff to pool the tips (on the theory that it takes a team to provide service; and in many restaurants it actually is a team who looks after you, not just "your" waiter.)

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      at one of these kinds of places? Is it split by all the hourly employees? There's no guarantee it doesn't go straight to the owner. There was a local restaurant owner in my town that took all tips from his waitstaff for himself. He paid younger kids the standard minimum wage (not server wages) to wait tables and pocketed all the tip money for himself.

      Which has been illegal everywhere in the United States for decades (but still happens, but it gets enforced when someone complains, as Starbucks found out to the tune of $105 million [jacksonlewis.com].

      Thankfully, he's no longer in business.

      That does tend to happen when companies get caught breaking the law that egregiously. In some states, wage theft can easily be criminal.

      But the tipping at a walk up payment screen just just angering in and of itself. Tip for what?

      I recently stopped going to a bagel shop because they ask for tips at the drive through window. But if you really want to be pissed off, check out the landlords who want to be tipped [intheknow.com]

  • by Can'tNot ( 5553824 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:07PM (#63512291)
    This seems like one of the few cases where tipping is not emotional blackmail. There's no one watching you, and no identified recipient of the tip.
    • by Savage-Rabbit ( 308260 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:30PM (#63512373)

      This seems like one of the few cases where tipping is not emotional blackmail. There's no one watching you, and no identified recipient of the tip.

      From the summary:

      Tipping researchers and labor advocates say so-called tip creep is a way for employers to put the onus for employee pay onto consumers, rather than raising wages themselves.

      That sums it up rather nicely. The net recipient of the tip is the greedy asshole who owns whatever place of business that operates the self-checkout demanding a tip from you. That tip is sure as shit not going to whatever human staff they have left either since employers pocketing tips seems to have become a standard business practice these days and it's not like the self-checkout will be uprooting itself after closing, dragging its machine ass off to a droid bar and spending the tip money on a well earned oil bath. A tip is basically the business owner guilt-tripping you into subsidising his labour costs instead of his paying his workers a living wage. That is all the more offensive since that self-service machine enabled that business owner to fire the human who used to operate the till. If these businesses could automate completely and operate without any human staff they'd still be asking you for a tip.

  • As a European ... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:09PM (#63512293) Homepage

    I find the tipping culture in the USA hard to understand. I will tip for good service but not for someone just doing a job, eg: serving a take away coffee in a shop. Here in the UK it is illegal to pay below the minimum wage due to the expectation of tips making up the difference; this does not mean that some employers do not take the piss - some do.

    • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:20PM (#63512339)
      As an American that served in the Marine Corps and traveled the world I agree with you. Tipping is definitely an American thing. Also in my travels almost everywhere I went haggling on price was a thing too. In the US you are expected to pay the "advertised" price. Nuts to that, I tried haggling in stores when I got back to the States and it worked! It often requires a manager to intervene but it works. My wife at the time thought I was nuts and a bit embarrassed by it, until I scored a television at Wal-mart for 1/3rd off the price pointing out that it was a model from the previous year and the new models were already out on the shelves. Then she had me haggling on her behalf everywhere, LOL.
      • by vivian ( 156520 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:50PM (#63512447)

        My wife almost treats it as a sport... haggles like hell with a combination of jokey banter and firm walk away tactics for some tourist souvenir to the point that I feel embarrassed she's crushing the price so low - eg. getting some wooden box with untold hours of detailed work for 1/4 of the $20 asking price.. We have compromised now - whatever she haggles down to, we actually give the guy double that, if he handles it gracefully.

        The US has many fine things going for it. Tipping is not one of those. Where I live, people who continuously fail to do their job well and keep customers happy get fired, but on the other hand all employees, permanent or casual get a minimum wage of $21/ hour plus 10% super, and permanent employees also get super, and 4 weeks paid leave per year. Casual workers get a minimum of 4 hour shifts and have a right to convert to permanent employment after 1 year of work with the same company, if they want. Somehow, I still seem to get good service, hot coffee and my meals served to me when I eat out at restaurants and cafes, without the staff having to get paid tips. Oh - and I know exactly how much I will be paying for my meal before I order it because the whole price, including taxes, is right there on the menu, without me having to figure out whatever local taxes apply.

    • Re:As a European ... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Can'tNot ( 5553824 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:30PM (#63512375)
      Tipping was European originally, and migrated to the US. But it was snuffed out in Europe as exploitative, while encouraged to flourish and grow in the US... for the same reason. Here's [time.com] an article on the history if you're interested.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Puc Rotte ( 10386027 )
      Same here. It's beyond absurd that you're expected to tip and I would have no problem not tipping at all. And the amounts. 20%, 25%? And now it's just self checkout. Laughable.

      Where I'm from, it's not that customary to tip, but if you do, it's because you're properly happy with the service and you do maybe 10%. Or if the amount is 13 and you have a 5 and 10 (for those paying with cash, but who does these days with Google/Apple/Samsung/etc Pay?). Digital/card payments help fight this, as well. Oh what's th
      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Like a couple of days ago, where it's Apple employees who are fighting for the right to get tipped. NO, fight for proper wages, instead!

        Er, dude, they are. They're (they being the new union) demanding a 100% wage increase and adding a tipping option onto credit card transactions.

        And people wonder why companies don't like unions.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Apparently the Americans originally hated tipping because it was a thing the aristocracy did to establish their dominance over their underlings. Then they decided to love it. Meanwhile, Europe went the other way when they decided paying workers decently was a pretty neat idea.

      We've got the "best" of both worlds here in Canada. The minimum wage is the minimum wage,* but servers still expect a tip and we're all so brainwashed by American culture we assume (or they'll tell you) that they're under paid.

      * Quebec

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      It's illegal to pay below minimum wage in the US, too. But at the federal level, minimum wage for jobs that rely on tips is lower - but if tips don't bring the total wages up to the normal minimum wage, the employer must. In other words, with minimum wage at $2.13/hour for tipped employees, if tips don't add up to $7.25/hour, the employer has to make up the difference.

      It's illegal for the employer (or any level of management) to take the tips, but effectively, the first $5.12/hour if tips goes to the owner.

    • I agree I only tip in New Zealand when its exceptional service, not simply bringing me my food, but in the US when wages are adjusted so a tip is included I tip. Pay your employees a decent wage and it would not be needed, when I look a the price of an item I should know what it costs, not that plus random tax and tips. I think the no tip system is better but its not the employees fault.

      Also why should a waiter get paid more for bringing expensive food as apposed to cheap food? It makes no sense.

    • The problem is that it's a hard practice to break in the United States. The number one push back comes from servers and bartenders themselves - at the right restaurants, tipping makes them so much more income than any strong wage, albeit at the expense of everyone else working at the restaurant. So for example, in Washington DC, servers and bartenders make $6 an hour. If tips fall short of local minimum wage (~$16), the restaurant has to make them whole. However, servers and bartenders can easily clear an a
  • Emotional blackmail (Score:5, Interesting)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:09PM (#63512295) Journal
    If you are getting blackmailed by a prompt on a checkout machine, that says more about your emotions than about anyone else. I would like to know where the tips are going, but if you don't like it, don't pay. Don't feel bad about that.
    • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

      Yeah I don't worry about offending robots.

    • If you are getting blackmailed by a prompt on a checkout machine, that says more about your emotions than about anyone else. I would like to know where the tips are going, but if you don't like it, don't pay. Don't feel bad about that.

      It's not just tips. Now cashiers at grocery and other stores ask for donations to a charity. I think they are hoping that some people will be too embarrassed to say no to giving money to the charity, e.g., "Think of the starving kids! You're not against starving kids, are you?"

  • Just select (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:11PM (#63512301)
    Just select 0 or no. Problem solved.
    • You cannot guilt me into tipping.
      I tip waiters who are making a "tipping" wage.

      I do not tip:
      Uber drivers
      barbers
      fast food counter servers

      • I don't tip at drive throughs unless it's Sonic and they skate to my car

        • I don't tip at drive throughs unless it's Sonic and they skate to my car

          Double your fun - tip using dollar coins and "accidentally" drop them.

      • I do tip people who deserve a tip due to what they do for me. What exactly has anyone done for me at a self-checkout? Am I supposed to tip myself?

        That's like sending myself a bouquet of flowers for a really good wank.

        • "That's like sending myself a bouquet of flowers for a really good wank." - LOL thanks for the laugh. I needed that.
        • I handle it very simply: I never under any circumstances use a self-checkout because I know they're a ripoff. Part of the price of every item you buy is intended to pay the wages of your cashier, and maybe a bagger. When you use self-checkout, there's no cashier or bagger involved, but you still pay the same amount as if there were. That's why you see so many: self-checkout is more profitable for the store. I don't use them, and I suggest that you stop using them as well.
          • Re: Exactly (Score:4, Insightful)

            by reanjr ( 588767 ) on Thursday May 11, 2023 @04:43AM (#63513317) Homepage

            What you think of as a rip-off, I think of as a value-add. I'd much prefer to do it myself for pretty much anything but a large number of groceries. And if they had proper facilities for handling that much loot, I'd prefer it then too.

            In every store I've been in for the last decade, the manned checkout is way slower than the self checkout. It's usually not even close.

            Don't get me started on the inevitable ignorant SNAP customer or coupon clipper or drunk bum paying with change. Manned checkout is a minefield of delays.

            Then you have typically a four-to-one ratio of how many simultaneous checkouts the guard at the self checkout can handle compared to the manned checkout. And then you add in the different queueing systems that protect you from unexpected delays at self checkout.

            Self checkout is a significantly better quality of service. It's not even close.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        You cannot guilt me into tipping.
        I tip waiters who are making a "tipping" wage.

        I do not tip:
        Uber drivers
        barbers
        fast food counter servers

        Uber drivers are paid well below even the below-minimum-wage waiters. They get about $3.50/hour without tips.

        Barbers are providing a highly personal custom service to you.

        What's wrong with you?

        • Barbers are providing a highly personal custom service to you.

          They should include that in the price of cutting my hair, seriously tell me the price up front and I will decide if I want to pay or not.

          as for uber drivers, I was told I was not allowed to tip (I am not from the US), I felt that what I paid was way too low for the time they spent.

  • Having your employees rely on tips is just a way to short them. Tipping, it rarely feels earned and always feels required. I'll show my gratitude when you've earned it, otherwise you can do you job like the rest of us.

    IT is a service job, anyone reading slashdot ever get a tip for it? Why is walking a beer over to you worth a buck while resetting the password you forgot is not? Those are both entry-level service jobs. The difference is the pay and environment.

    I received great restaurant service in Spain,

    • Most servers I know (in my family and in life), would turn down a server job paying $15 an hour in favor of the 2.25 with tips.

      • Most servers I know (in my family and in life), would turn down a server job paying $15 an hour in favor of the 2.25 with tips.

        Only in places where the tipping culture has gone fully stupid like the USA. No one outside the USA would choose a $2.25 + tips over a $15/hr. What makes the USA different is the minimum "guaranteed" tip even with no effort on behalf of the server.

        • by taustin ( 171655 )

          No one outside the USA would choose a $2.25 + tips over a $15/hr.

          No one outside the USA would reasonably expect the tips to add up to more than $12.75/hour.

          Depending on where you work, you'd be fired because to get tips that low you'd have to stab someone in the throat or light the place on fire.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        I've had discussions with servers who were violently opposed to doing away with tips even if they were guaranteed a steady wage equal - or greater - to what they've been making with tips.

        Stupidity comes in many flavors.

        • The fact is that you claiming they will make more has little bearing on if they will make more. People dont trust you but they do trust making $100K a year while you dwell on how little their $5/hour base pay is like a drone. They understand that you dont understand. They know that you dont know.

          They know what they make and your claims to the contrary are irrelevant noise for them. They just dont care when you are wrong and you were demonstrably wrong and got heated when people didnt just believe you.
        • What is stupid about them maximizing their revenue?
      • I remember my mom telling me about restaurants in Vegas where the servers paid for the opportunity to wait tables. This was back in the 70s. Presumably this is no longer a thing, and perhaps even illegal at the time. But the market tends to find appropriate prices.

    • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @06:53PM (#63512451)
      I regularly get good service in most places in Spain. I live here. Sometimes service staff have a bad day & are grumpy but that's OK; they're human. I have bad days too. And if someone says something unreasonable or shitty, guess what? I'd rather they were sincere than put on fake smiles & be all "chirpy-cheerful." Much more civilised.
    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Why is walking a beer over to you worth a buck while resetting the password you forgot is not? Those are both entry-level service jobs. The difference is the pay and environment.

      I received great restaurant service in Spain, never had to tip once.

      Because you're being paid a living wage that is most likely 8-20 times higher than the person walking that beer over to you. They are not even paid close to minimum wage, and rely on tips.

      By contrast, your water in Spain was getting paid a decent amount.

  • by kellin ( 28417 )

    These excuses for why its done are absurd. Anyone who gets "pressured" into tipping at a self-service kiosk is an idiot. Hell, I never tip when I go into a Starbucks or some other coffee place, and I don't feel even remotely bothered by it. What bothers me is going to a restaurant and the systems suggest a minimum of 20/22/24%. Uhm. I just spent $75 on a mediocre meal for two, you can pay your employees proper wages (Yes, this happened at some shit "Mexican" restaurant in the San Fernando Valley).

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      These excuses for why its done are absurd. Anyone who gets "pressured" into tipping at a self-service kiosk is an idiot.

      The place where I find it uncomfortable is where you walk up to a counter, place your order, go stand somewhere, and then go pick it up from the counter. Then you take it home, or seat yourself at one of the tables. There is no waiter.

      But when you pick up your food at the counter, you pay for it then. And they shove a touchpad at you that asks how much you want to tip. The buttons are all high percentages. There's an awkward "No Tip" button your not supposed to push. The person is standing there, waiting fo

  • Became 20% - 25% - 30% in the last couple years. WTF ?!
    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @07:03PM (#63512477)

      Inflation is horrible all over the world. I used to pay 0% tips and even here that has nearly doubled, it's crazy.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Became 20% - 25% - 30% in the last couple years. WTF ?!

      Not only that, but these days it's calculated on top of the taxes and service fees (not on the actual food subtotal).

      Where I live (near Washington, D.C.) the taxes and shit are as high as 20%. So with a 20% tip, I pay 40% on top of the advertised price.

      A small hamburger is $18.
      You wind up paying over $25.
      This is for counter service (like at McDonalds), no waiter involved.

      I tip very well for being waited on.
      I don't like tipping for no service,
      just someone handing me a burger
      at a fast food counter.

  • No personal service, no gift. Simple as that.

  • I don't get the problem; if you don't feel the service was worth it, don't tip. This doesn't change at all.

  • If a shop owner wants customers to give me a 20% tip for doing the cashier's job well, like managing to correctly scan all items without needing help from staff, they're welcome to do so.

    The way they're doing it, I feel less emotional blackmail an more of an urge to burn the place down.

  • by v1 ( 525388 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @07:00PM (#63512467) Homepage Journal

    (I'm sorry this is a little long, I want to be very clear about what I have to say)

    Tipping USED to be something you could do to show your appreciation for exemplary service provided by a server. And for that it was great.

    If you received average service, you'd leave no tip. The managers wouldn't be involved.

    If you received exemplary service, you could leave a tip, showing your gratitude. The server would receive a little bonus for their extra effort. Management would still be uninvolved.

    If you received POOR service, the typical thing to do would be to complain to the manager. The customer's concerns would be discussed with the waiter as a management action.

    In all three cases, the customer would pay the same amount, the server would receive the same base pay, AND the business would receive the same payment. The only difference is if they did a bad job, they'd get yelled at by their supervisor, and if they did outstanding they'd get a little bonus. This was fair to all involved, and a part of the service the customer received from the business was to "insure at least average service", and that was reflected in a small portion of the payment the customer made. The customer was paying the business to insure good service.

    But then something changed. Laws were passed that allowed businesses to shift the burden of insuring good customer service to the customer. Yes, the CUSTOMER is now responsible for making sure the servers provide good service. Wasn't this the manager's job? Well now it's the customer's job. (and you're not likely to see a discount due to the reduced value) That's the first problem. But wait, there's more! Lets look at the three scenarios above under the new laws.

    If you received average service, you'd leave an average tip. This first raises the question, "does this mean the cost of the meal goes down?" Simple studies have already shown that significantly raising employee wages has only a very minor impact on meal prices, particularly in Europe where they've been forced to do exactly that. So the customer is probably going to end up paying a little MORE for their meal. If they gave the "recommended tip" of 15%, and the price of the meal even went down 10%, they'd still be paying an additional 5%. Now in addition to the business making an extra 5% on the sale, they're no longer providing the service of insuring good service, so they're doing less, and making a little more by lowering waves in leu of tips. Ideally, the servers wouldn't see a change. (more on that later)

    If you receive exemplary service, you could leave a larger tip. But this will significantly increase the cost of the meal. You as a customer are being expected to pay for better service. I suppose this may be fair to the server, but you didn't ask for better service, you got it anyway, and now you're having to pay for it. In that regard it doesn't look quite fair to the customer, who may not leave any additional tip. I'm sure management told them "better service, better tips!" but that's just not going to be the case a lot of the time. Some may say that the average quality of service has gone down over the years, and now what was considered "good service" would not be considered incredible service. Just think of pulling into the gas station's full service bay and having a squad of kids descend on your vehicle, cleaning the windows, checking the tires, filling the coolant, etc. THAT was NORMAL service, and you probably weren't even tipping them.

    And lastly, if you received POOR service, you probably wouldn't leave any tip, or maybe a very small tip. So again, you're taking over the duties of policing the servers, but you're getting a discount for doing it, so I suppose that's fair. But now that shorts the server, which you might consider somewhat justified - less pay for worse service.

    Besides "under-tipping", customers have NO obligation to tip at all in many restaurants, so some just won't. This loss is borne entirely on the servers, and serves as

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Tipping USED to be something you could do to show your appreciation for exemplary service provided by a server. And for that it was great.

      If you received average service, you'd leave no tip.

      Depends how and where you were raised, I guess. Here in the USA, I remember learning about tipping when I was first taken out to a real restaurant. You know, with a waitress. (Not fancy, but not McDonalds). I was 10 years old. I was taught: Always leave at least $1/person at the table. That's a 1960 dollar, which today would be $10.25). If the service was excellent, you tip more.

      By the time I was a teenager working in a real (not fancy) restaurant, a 15% tip (on the subtotal before taxes) for decent service

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 10, 2023 @07:09PM (#63512489)
    Grow some fucking cojones. Push 0%, and if someone asks about it (they won't) tell them that tipping for no service is idiotic. Crying "emotional blackmail" cheapens what that actually means, the same way that pathetic flimps try to cry "fart rape" about someone passing gas in an elevator.
    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      Outrage monkeys gonna outrage. It's what they do. It's all they do. Most will actually actively resist actually solving a problem, because then they have to find something new to outrage over.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      that pathetic flimps try to cry "fart rape" about someone passing gas in an elevator.

      I learned a new term from a flight attendant on Youtube the other day. Referring to people walking up and down the cabin aisle trying to pretend they're not farting.

      "Crop dusting"

  • Ban tipping. Problem solved.
  • Iâ(TM)ll probably get modded down for mentioning the âoeregulationâ word, but I do feel business need to be regulated when it comes to tips and be transparent when it comes to where the tip money is going.

    Though tipping machines is a step too far.

    • I was just thinking that if I'm doing my own checkout and bagging the store should be paying ME. I'm certainly not getting any savings from their automation passed along to me.

  • Tipping is now popping up everywhere, cashiers mainly but all sorts of industries are doing it. I had movers ask me for a tip. Meanwhile, traditional tipping jobs such as waiters are now asking for tipping by default to 25% or 18% instead of the normal 15%. The question is why is this happening? It's indicative of people getting poorer and having a harder time making ends meet. This is going to end up driving people away from many places when they feel harassed by tips. What will be the tipping point (pun i
  • I recently paid $7 plus tax for a 32-oz iced tea at a stadium, and was offered the options of 10%, 15%, 20%, or "other." I hate that the default option is to leave a tip on an already very overpriced drink which took the person working the register a few seconds to make. I did not try to opt out, so I'm not sure what that would have entailed, but it left a bad taste in my mouth. The tea was okay.

  • "Just put the tip in and see how it feels."

    Probably gets more than the guilt messages.

  • The problem with this isn't the ludicrous 'emotional blackmail' theory. It's wasting everyone's time by default.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday May 11, 2023 @02:24AM (#63513147)

    I routinely tip 0% on credit or cash and hand the server the tip in cash.

    No server, nobody to hand the cash to. So sad.

  • by Wokan ( 14062 ) on Thursday May 11, 2023 @02:39PM (#63514639) Journal

    Enough. I'm going to start putting 0%. Legally the employers have to make up for anything less than minimum wage and I'm tired of freeing them to screw over an employee having an off day or dealing with more tables than they should have to. It's going to hurt the servers, but someone has to fire the first shot.

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