- Nov 3, 2011
- 26,552
- 29,787
I don't mind tipping when I receive good service, but there's a lot of foolishness centered around tipping these days.
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I'm sure this has been brought up in this thread already, but man these delivery fees getting outta hand.
Was bout to order some Dominos a few weeks back just to find out that they chargin $6 for delivery now
and none of that goes to the drivers... so they want me to tip on top of that? Nah, b.
The White House is doing something very progressive in looking to eliminate or lower junk fees in the travel and entertainment industry.
Hopefully that puts some pressure on the food industry with these crazy fees. I hate being required to tip, I rather tip according to the service I receive and be able to have the choice.
That is my point they shouldn't know how much they are getting because the service level might drop if it is disrespectful. I worked in Silver Diner back in the day and the dude left me a quarter tip.Sounds good in principle, but seeing some of those tips beforehand can be rather disrespectful or demoralizing.
Tipping culture and etiquette is just tricky.
Gotta join those DD/food groups. PM if you want a link.I'm sure this has been brought up in this thread already, but man these delivery fees getting outta hand.
Was bout to order some Dominos a few weeks back just to find out that they chargin $6 for delivery now
and none of that goes to the drivers... so they want me to tip on top of that? Nah, b.
Both apps and dining in for the food industry was what I meant. But yeah, you're spot on with it being tricky to address. They're trying to eliminate the fees being a surprise at the end of checkout for rentals, entertainment and travel. Crazy how all it took for the outrage was a Taylor Swift concertI order food regularly and service/delivery charges are the worst. The fee increases have been over the past few years as online ordering has become more popular
When you talk about crazy fees are you referring to the fees when you order via an app or when you actually sit down and dine in (ie a service charge). I’m aware of the Biden administration’s efforts to reduce and eliminate junk fees but I thought those were more tied to fees to arbitrarily raise profits while tipping is more tied to worker’s wages so it is a bit trickier to address. I’m not entirely sure but it would definitely be nice be nice.
I wonder what percentage of the service workforce would stand to make less with a universal standard charge as opposed to letting folks tip. It probably would be mostly those at the high end restaurants.
We need to go back to looking at going to restaurants as a luxury. The way we consume is not sustainable. Maybe it's just my opinion, but it's forcing the industry to find so many ways to turn profits at the cost of workers and consumers.
I grew up underprivileged so it was definitely a luxury growing up Dining out has become the norm and so has having to pay for fees for every little bit of service.I had that EXACT sentence typed yesterday before rewriting my post except it was that I don’t mind tipping because I view dining out/ordering food as a luxury. I use Drizly, UberEats for booze and Amazon Fresh/Whole Foods delivery too and the same principle applies. I don’t feel like my leaving my place, going to the store, picking everything out, waiting in line and taking it back to my place. The tip is the luxury I pay for the convenience IMO.
I think the simplest way to fix this is to have less transparency.
Apps and in service dining should have a set amount that is inclusive of all fees, taxes, etc.
Example: Doordash delivery
Pizza: $42
Tip: up to you goes to dasher
vs
Pizza: 23
Delivery: 6
Service fee: 7
Local tax: 4
etc etc
Personally i’d go further and simply eliminate tipping. It’s such a dumb system. Let’s reward people for doing their work. Like a gold star in elementary school sort of nonsense. If an employee is good they should simply get paid the right amount + retain their job.
When people use food delivery apps (GrubHub, UberEats, etc) is the driver affiliated with the restaurant? Who exactly are those delivery and services fees going to? I could see how there is a disconnect if they drivers aren't employees of the establishment.
drivers are self employed. no fees go to them, they all go to the app. no disconnect the apps are just greedy. they get all those fees plus a cut of the actual food price from the restaurant
Its a gamble. These apps just show you the minimum pay without tip.i mean, she shouldn’t have taken the order
Found out there's a decent amount of no-tip restaurants in the city that I'll try to visit, some just state up-front there's a service fee, but no tip, others just don't accept tips at all
Saw the menu for one named Ops Pizza in BK where they state their policy