Tipping
Not in the hobby but everyday life. restaurants, delivery drivers, hair sylists, cabbies, doormen, housekeepers, newspaper boys (does anyone still subscribe to a print edition?), shoeshine guy, etc. etc.
The impetus for this thread: I ordered a pizza today for late lunch. Total is $12.something (including a delivery fee). All I got is a twenty. Now I really don't think a $7.something tip is appropriate, so I pay by credit card and give him $4.something.
I believe in tipping well but not excessively.
So, what are your tipping norms
Originally Posted by atlcomedy
I generally tip between 15 -20% of whatever the service or product amount is. Mostly tip waiters/waitresses, hair dressers, anyone basically doing salon services. I tip the pizza delivery man. Generally depends on what the service / product is. I do this because I understand that most of the people in these type services live off tips. They generally are not paid beyond more than 2 dollars and hour.
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Minimum Wage Tipped Workers
A tip is wage according to the Fair Labor Standard Act (FLSA). You are a tipped employee - that's for example a waitress or bellboy - if you receive regularly and costomarily more than $30 a month in tip. If so,
your employer is only required to pay $2.13 an hour in direct wages if that amount plus the tips received equals at least the federal minimum wage of $7,25 per hour. Your employer can only do that if you are informed about the tip credit allowance, if your employer is able to show that you earn at least the minimum wage when direct wage and tip are combined and allows you to retain all tips. In a lot of states your employer is allowed to install a valid tip pooling arrangement in which all employees participate. When your job is a combined tipped and a non-tipped profession, the tip credit is always only for the hours spent in the tipped occupation.
See link for more information on this subject:
http://www.paywizard.org/main/Minimu...ageTIPRecevers