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Related: Culture Forums, Support Forumsgeneral question on tipping
Last edited Mon Jun 26, 2023, 08:08 PM - Edit history (1)
Been wondering this for some period of time now ..
When the server at the coffee house spins the little screen around to me - to either add a percentage tip to total, or conversely decline ... Is that 'tip' handled in the same way as the the dollar bill(s) I stuff in the jar on the counter?
Basic question/concern is obviously - is that money actually getting to the servers and wait staff? (when and how) And then, further, if someone has a real answer - are there other implications involved - taxes, withholding, reporting - fair splits and distribution? And - is anybody, beyond perhaps owner and site manager, in possession of those figures and (purported) distributions?
Think. Again.
(19,099 posts)CrispyQ
(38,590 posts)Pay your damned employees! Why do I have to pay for goods/services & then pay your employees, too? Also, there are all the issues you mentioned. Who really gets the money?
This is a little dated, 2014, I think.
NoRethugFriends
(3,070 posts)an extra buck in a jar for someone working possibly a minimum wage job doesn't hurt if you can afford it.
stopdiggin
(13,018 posts)(while fundamentally sound social economics) - - is pretty much hollering down the wind - when it comes to the person that is juggling 2 jobs, and praying that the sh*tty car doesn't give up on them this week. Kinda' comes down to who you're 'sticking it to' - and who you're trying to help.
It doesn't help that Reagan and his administration slashed wait staff minimum wages in half, making those workers dependent on tips.
I waited tables at Ponderosa when I was a teen and a manager of mine let me know why I only made half of minimum wage, which was $4.25 at that time. That was the only time he ever told me anything political. I'm not positive, but I believe that he leaned left.
doc03
(36,964 posts)was $1.25 but minimum wage was only $.75 for servers and busboys. The servers shared $4 a day with us out of their tips giving
us $1.25 an hour, $10 a day was pretty good money back then and $4 was tax free.
Niagara
(9,908 posts)I went searching the internet and I only found this article from February 5, 1983, basically a new rule to report tips to the IRS for tax purposes.
I can't find anything else about tipped workers during the Reagan Admin.
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1983/02/05/New-Internal-Revenue-Service-rules-for-reporting-tips-have/9750413269200/
sl8
(16,273 posts)The Tip Credit Provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA): In Brief - CRS Reports (pdf)
https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R43445/5
intrepidity
(7,927 posts)I still don't fully understand tipping in contexts besides wait staff at dine-in restaurants.
I tend to err on the side of over tipping and it often feels weird when I tip an owner of a business (or whom I suspect is owner but not sure).
So far I've not seen a tip jar at the grocery store checkers, but I bet it is coming. They already ask for various "donations" (where do those *really* go?) so just a matter of time til checkers jump on the bandwagon.
And meanwhile corporate profits are at obscene levels.
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)And it gets charged to your debit or credit card you used for payment.
IOW the act of the server spinning a screen around to you is no different from any other time you leave a tip in a way that varies from just handing someone some cash.
There's a lot of different laws in different places re: how your tip is handled, but one thing about this ... fairly or not, employees who seem to earn little in verifiable tips (i.e. one with a paper trail) are often looked down upon as 'not good employees'.
stopdiggin
(13,018 posts)Yes - I know that 'gratuity' has long been added to tab when paying by credit card. Same thing. (and I often had similar questions there. suspect a lot of it kind of depends on the business you're dealing with .. )
marble falls
(62,523 posts)... generous with their server's tips - giving portions to managers, maintenance, kitchen all illegal by Federal law.
All smart servers declare their tips honestly. It could make a difference with SSI and unemployment.
EYESORE 9001
(27,617 posts)Getting spoiled by debit card payments, I often forget about walking-around money. I will tip using the debit card in those instances, but I dont like doing it.
sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)I think started in the hoary past of pre-2nd amendment carnage as either a bribe or a thank you for "please not killing me."
we can do it
(12,791 posts)MichMan
(13,561 posts)stopdiggin
(13,018 posts)and I have to admit to being a little on the fence about that ...
(I'm otherwise a pretty much no nonsense, "Pay Your Damned Taxes" sort of hard ass. A little more sympathy for the person on the lower end of the economic ladder - but still not really down with wholesale, and universally acknowledged, cheating)
beaglelover
(4,115 posts)see it reflected in their paychecks. She basically told him not to enter a tip.
wishstar
(5,493 posts)Good way to get rid of spare change