Discretionary service charge WTF!!!
Discretionary service charge WTF!!!
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Discussion

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Went to a Restaurant recently (snort snort) £140 bill, £17 (12.5% Discretionary service charge) paid the bill, did not want to create a scene in front of my wife & kids, but surely this is not playing ball!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I WANTED to just pay the bill without the service charge, then tip the waitress herself.

But she started banging on about it goes into a pool for everyone, WTF, then split between all the staff, all of which came no where near my bloody table. So, i paid it, rather than having a scene with the manager.

Will not be going there again, first time i have had this, lovely meal and all that, but really, is this right.

What does everyone/others feel about this, i've had a lovely meal, but this charge takes the edge of it slightly.

Or am i being cynical/tight ass or sensible!

The fact is, i've had a lovely meal, will leave a tip to the girl that served me, go home, happy days.

But. oh no, thankyou for visiting us tonight, here is the bill, oh by the way, don't bother tipping, we will tell you how much to tip, not just your waitress, but every other bloody person who was serving also. Who, by the way, came no where near your table.

Regards.

Dave S.



Edited by Dave3166 on Friday 25th March 22:34


Edited by Dave3166 on Friday 25th March 22:44

Sheets Tabuer

21,143 posts

241 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Living wage and tips?

I can understand it in the US where tips are part of pay but not here, I'd refuse to pay it.

NordicCrankShaft

1,945 posts

141 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
I agree with you to an extent and have never paid a service charge but paid an individual tip.

The part about pooling it and you saying the others never came anywhere near your table.......well, how do you think your food got cooked and your drinks got poured, why does a glorified plate carrier deserve extra money whilst the people working 10x harder behind the scenes just get the same rubbish pay.

Otherwise I agree.

anonymous-user

80 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Do you get out much?

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
desolate said:
Do you get out much?
Yes thanks, im always bloody out doing things.

Just don't like having the piss taken.

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
NordicCrankShaft said:
I agree with you to an extent and have never paid a service charge but paid an individual tip.

The part about pooling it and you saying the others never came anywhere near your table.......well, how do you think your food got cooked and your drinks got poured, why does a glorified plate carrier deserve extra money whilst the people working 10x harder behind the scenes just get the same rubbish pay.

Otherwise I agree.
Also agree, but, the waiting staff are the front of house, dealing with the punters, who, can sometimes be very difficult to deal with & awkward.

The waiting staff settle you in & set the tone for the evening.


Edited by Dave3166 on Friday 25th March 22:46


Edited by Dave3166 on Friday 25th March 22:49

anonymous-user

80 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
a lot of tips are used for other uses than actually giving to the workers.

I tip delivery people but not waiters.

anonymous-user

80 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Dave3166 said:
desolate said:
Do you get out much?
Yes thanks, im always bloody out doing things.

Just don't like having the piss taken.
Surely it's been on most restaurant bills for the last 20 years?

Something may have tipped you over the edge and this had finished you off!

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Sheets Tabuer said:
Living wage and tips?

I can understand it in the US where tips are part of pay but not here, I'd refuse to pay it.
I Will let this one go, i have, i've bloody paid it, next time, no chanceshootbiggrin

ashleyman

7,281 posts

125 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
I totally know where you are coming from, my experience is a little long but it taught me to always ask the waiter what happens with the tip / charge to make sure if I am leaving one he gets at least the most of it .

The first time this happened to me was at quite a high end place. Our bill was over £700 so the 'discretionary service charge' obviously added a lot to the bill. As a group we had already arranged how much we were planning to tip the guy. It was more than what was on the bill as he was excellent. We never had to ask twice, not a single item came incorrect or with issues. He was prompt and just a really nice guy.

I asked him if he would be getting this tip - if he would prefer it in cash so it wasn't taxable and he explained how it was pooled on a 10 point system based on rank of staff. Manager got 3 points, chef 2, then the rest was split between the on duty front of house.

I asked the waiter to remove the charge from the bill and he looked shocked! The manager came over and asked what was wrong, as if we were complaining. I had to take the manager to one said and explain that if I wanted to reward my waiter with a tip, it would be one that I felt he deserved and not one that was decided by his manager - who wasn't unbiased towards his performance as he had something to gain.

Anyway. The manager eventually took the charge off the bill and all was sorted. I paid the bill and left a small tip for the staff. As I was walking out I called the waiter over, thanked him for his help and said there was zero problems with our service I just wanted you to have what we wanted to give you in cash. I shook the waiters hand and gave him his tip. All £200 of it. I could tell he was shocked by the size of the roll of cash in his hand but he definitely deserved it more than his money grabbing manager who would have taken a third of it.

I also NEVER tip unless the service is really excellent. Average service doesn't deserve anything more than paying my bill and saying thank you as I leave.

Edited by ashleyman on Friday 25th March 22:58

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
desolate said:
Surely it's been on most restaurant bills for the last 20 years?

Something may have tipped you over the edge and this had finished you off!
I Know its not a new thing, you're right, but, i was not prepared for it tonightrantingbiggrin

People work hard for their money, to me, this is just taking the piss slightlyfurious

Evolved

4,077 posts

213 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Just ask for it to be removed. Boils my piss this type of st, it's expected that you pay extra for a service you're already paying for.I'd love to stick another 12% on my invoices as a tip.

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
ashleyman said:
I totally know where you are coming from, my experience is a little long but it taught me to always ask the waiter what happens with the tip / charge to make sure if I am leaving one he gets at least the most of it .

The first time this happened to me was at quite a high end place. Our bill was over £700 so the 'discretionary service charge' obviously added a lot to the bill. As a group we had already arranged how much we were planning to tip the guy. It was more than what was on the bill as he was excellent. We never had to ask twice, not a single item came incorrect or with issues. He was prompt and just a really nice guy.

I asked him if he would be getting this tip - if he would prefer it in cash so it wasn't taxable and he explained how it was pooled on a 10 point system based on rank of staff. Manager got 3 points, chef 2, then the rest was split between the on duty front of house.
biggrin
I asked the waiter to remove the charge from the bill and he looked shocked! The manager came over and asked what was wrong, as if we were complaining. I had to take the manager to one said and explain that if I wanted to reward my waiter with a tip, it would be one that I felt he deserved and not one that was decided by his manager - who wasn't unbiased towards his performance as he had something to gain.

Anyway. The manager eventually took the charge off the bill and all was sorted. I paid the bill and left a small tip for the staff. As I was walking out I called the waiter over, thanked him for his help and said there was zero problems with our service I just wanted you to have what we wanted to give you in cash. I shook the waiters hand and gave him his tip. All £200 of it. I could tell he was shocked by the size of the roll of cash in his hand but he definitely deserved it more than his money grabbing manager who would have taken a third of it.
Bloody good for youthumbup

Don't get me wrong, but, the food was lovely, service, could not complain, surroundings nice etc etc, i just wanted to tip the waitress herself, not the manager, chef etc, who probably get more anyway.

I Need to stop now, i feel i could go on for ever & everbiggrin

Probably making a big fuss over nothing really, but, reallybanghead Have they no shameredcard

Edited by Dave3166 on Friday 25th March 23:09

simoid

19,774 posts

184 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Hospitality is very much a team. If you've had a good experience, it's likely as much down to the chef and kitchen porters, drinks staff, management, cleaners, whatever than whichever person was taking orders and delivering food. Who trained the person who delivered the food? If it's the supervisor they're probably only on £0.50 more per hour than the waiting staff in many places: hardly mega bucks.

0000

13,816 posts

217 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
I avoid restaurants that put the onus on you to tell them to do one over the tip. Not cricket.

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
simoid said:
Hospitality is very much a team. If you've had a good experience, it's likely as much down to the chef and kitchen porters, drinks staff, management, cleaners, whatever than whichever person was taking orders and delivering food. Who trained the person who delivered the food? If it's the supervisor they're probably only on £0.50 more per hour than the waiting staff in many places: hardly mega bucks.
Yeh, alrightthumbup

bangheadbangheadbanghead

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
0000 said:
I avoid restaurants that put the onus on you to tell them to do one over the tip. Not cricket.
Don't normally go to this sort of restaurant, thank god, but, wifes birthday, has said she would like to go there, so booked as a surprise, friends have been to one of these restaurants, so thought a good idea.

Would just rather leave my own tip, than be told what to leave by the restaurant, that is charging good money for me & my family to eat there.

simoid

19,774 posts

184 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
Dave3166 said:
Yeh, alrightthumbup

bangheadbangheadbanghead
Lol! "Discretionary £X added to your bill" does annoy me though. We do have quite ste service in this country, I think it would be improved if tipping was a compliment for good work as opposed to an expectation/obligation.

Seriously though, if you have a good experience and a good meal it's likely that everyone in the team is pulling their weight. If the manager is st/disorganised/a bd then the waiting staff won't be bothering their arses, and you'll have a st meal. Been there on the supply and demand side of things smile

PS I'm not saying don't tip an individual if they've been particularly impressive, that's totally up to you. The general concept of pooled tips is a fair one IMO.

Dave3166

Original Poster:

1,846 posts

152 months

Friday 25th March 2016
quotequote all
simoid said:
Lol! "Discretionary £X added to your bill" does annoy me though. We do have quite ste service in this country, I think it would be improved if tipping was a compliment for good work as opposed to an expectation/obligation.

Seriously though, if you have a good experience and a good meal it's likely that everyone in the team is pulling their weight. If the manager is st/disorganised/a bd then the waiting staff won't be bothering their arses, and you'll have a st meal. Been there on the supply and demand side of things smile

PS I'm not saying don't tip an individual if they've been particularly impressive, that's totally up to you. The general concept of pooled tips is a fair one IMO.
👍😎

I agree with you, if I dig really deep into my soul, but, I don't agree with being told how much to tip, when, that person may not want to tip that much or, they may not really be able to tip because of a budget or cannot afford to tip that much.


We all have to budget each week👍

juice

9,662 posts

308 months

Saturday 26th March 2016
quotequote all
I'm not fussed about a service charge per se, but I do disagree about any wine being included in the total that makes up the service charge.
If you're buying say, a 50 quid bottle of wine which already has a very good mark up on it then I disagree with paying 15-20% service charge on top of it.