Midpack wrote:Probably a newbie question, but I didn't find the topic via search. When buying a relatively expensive bottle of wine, how to figure the tip? 18%± as usual or 18%± on everything but the wine and $X for the wine? I did 18% on dinner plus $10 for the wine last night (wine cost more than the entire dinner), but I'm having second thoughts. Seems the old guidance was the latter since serving a $300 bottle is the same effort from the server as a $30 bottle. Just curious what the norm is nowadays...
Louisa Chu wrote:
Like food wine should be tipped at 15-20% depending on service. Isn't it the same effort to serve a foie gras terrine as it is a plain green salad? Like it or not, that's the US tipping custom.
At a certain point tipping accordingly isn't tipping 20%, it's tipping a flat rate per bottle. I think asking for a $100 tip on a $500 bottle is greedy, personally.mhill95149 wrote:If you are willing to spend $100 to $500 for a bottle of wine then you should be prepared to tip accordingly.... if not, you are cheap!
jpschust wrote:At a certain point tipping accordingly isn't tipping 20%, it's tipping a flat rate per bottle. I think asking for a $100 tip on a $500 bottle is greedy, personally.mhill95149 wrote:If you are willing to spend $100 to $500 for a bottle of wine then you should be prepared to tip accordingly.... if not, you are cheap!
Flip wrote:So, If you purchase a $500 (which s a few of the places I worked offered) bottle of wine, and left $20 in tip for wine service I could possibly have ended up paying $10 for you to enjoy that bottle.
nr706 wrote:Flip wrote:So, If you purchase a $500 (which s a few of the places I worked offered) bottle of wine, and left $20 in tip for wine service I could possibly have ended up paying $10 for you to enjoy that bottle.
Is that made clear to the average consumer? How is the costomer supposed to know the many tip-splitting policies of various restaurants?
So, If you purchase a $500 (which s a few of the places I worked offered) bottle of wine, and left $20 in tip for wine service I could possibly have ended up paying $10 for you to enjoy that bottle.
Is that made clear to the average consumer? How is the costomer supposed to know the many tip-splitting policies of various restaurants?
Mike G wrote: If your policies result in something that messed up, your policies are the problem-- and they're your problem, not mine.
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jpschust wrote:2. You tip ~20% on bottles up to a certain price point and then move to a flat rate based on the price of the bottle, generally only used on super high end bottles, the reason being that high end bottles often end up more than the price of food itself.
It's not a hard and fast rule on the point for me at which I stop tipping 20% on the wine. On a bottle of wine that's about 230- 30 bucks probably- so just a touch over where you were, but not much. It's not quite 20%, it's not quite 10%. The way I kind of calculate the flat rate at times is to look at corkage and add a little bit to whatever that dollar amount is- without taking actual corkage into account, if the corkage is 25 bucks, I'll usually give about 30 a bottle for bottles over a certain price point. I don't think you were too far off in your tip- no need to feel cheap.Midpack wrote:jpschust wrote:2. You tip ~20% on bottles up to a certain price point and then move to a flat rate based on the price of the bottle, generally only used on super high end bottles, the reason being that high end bottles often end up more than the price of food itself.
OK, the actual situation. Dinner for two at about $160 (apps, entree, dessert, etc.) with a bottle of wine that cost $230 (Shafer Cab Sauv). We got ordinary all purpose red wine glasses (more like a Pinot style) and a typical presentation. I tipped 18% on the meal and $20 for the wine - I am still having second thoughts now that I've read these posts. (WRT 18%, the service was quite good but I had 3 pin bones in my salmon...) What would you recommend as a tip on the wine? Several of you have acknowledged there is a point over which you would go to a flat rate, but I missed at what point... And BTW, thanks for your feedback, it's been enlightening.
Midpack wrote:jpschust wrote:2. You tip ~20% on bottles up to a certain price point and then move to a flat rate based on the price of the bottle, generally only used on super high end bottles, the reason being that high end bottles often end up more than the price of food itself.
OK, the actual situation. Dinner for two at about $160 (apps, entree, dessert, etc.) with a bottle of wine that cost $230 (Shafer Cab Sauv). We got ordinary all purpose red wine glasses (more like a Pinot style) and a typical presentation. I tipped 18% on the meal and $20 for the wine - I am still having second thoughts now that I've read these posts. (WRT 18%, the service was quite good but I had 3 pin bones in my salmon...) What would you recommend as a tip on the wine? Several of you have acknowledged there is a point over which you would go to a flat rate, but I missed at what point... And BTW, thanks for your feedback, it's been enlightening.
Not to sound like I'm on a soapbox, but would you have tipped better on the dinner if you didn't have the 3 pin bones in your salmon? If so, why? The server in most restaurants is not the prep cook. Why should they be punished?
Mike G wrote:Not to sound like I'm on a soapbox, but would you have tipped better on the dinner if you didn't have the 3 pin bones in your salmon? If so, why? The server in most restaurants is not the prep cook. Why should they be punished?
Which is simply another way in which the whole system is so weird-- I am expected to pay the salary and directly incent the guy who carries food* but not the guy who makes it, when that, first and foremost, is what I'm there for.
Not that I expect to be able to change any of that-- just observing that looking for logic in any aspect of the system is probably misguided.
* Admittedly good waiters do more than that, of course. And bad ones barely manage that tolerably...
It is not uncommon knowledge that the waitstaff in most restaurants don't receive a paycheck, their wages generally don't even cover the taxes.
Flip wrote:Midpack,
Not to sound like I'm on a soapbox, but would you have tipped better on the dinner if you didn't have the 3 pin bones in your salmon? If so, why? The server in most restaurants is not the prep cook. Why should they be punished? If you wouldn't have tipped differently, why mention them?
Flip
Mike G wrote:Which is simply another way in which the whole system is so weird-- I am expected to pay the salary and directly incent the guy who carries food* but not the guy who makes it...
Fair question. While I realize the wait staff wasn't responsible for the pin bones, they are my only line of communication unless I speak to the M'd or the Manager-not warranted in this case IMHO. But I assume the waiter will indeed make the back of the house or others aware as a result of the below average tip.
Tip outs are not mandated by anyone- it's illegal in most states to force a server to share tips. So if that's her choice then that's her choice.geli wrote:I asked my friend who works at two restaurants in Chicago that have high-end wine on their menu (and has worked at several others), and she has this to say:
She usually ends up tipping out between 40 and 50 percent of her own tips. She tips her busboy, her food-runner, the bartender, and the host/hostess. Her tip outs are a set percentage of her overall ring, including liquor and wine sales, not a percentage of the actual tips that she received, and they are not optional. The restaurant assumes she receives an average 18% tip overall and calculates the tip-outs accordingly. For example, if someone buys a $300 bottle of wine and they only tip her $10 on it (which happens), she still has to tip out as if she'd received the full 18 percent.
Personally I feel that if you are comfortable enough financially to buy a really expensive bottle of wine, you should take the tip into account. Unfortunately, this has never been a problem I've faced....