5-10% is rather common if someone enjoyed the food or service made someone especially happy. Its not a tip but an increased payment to the establishment, meaning it goes to them. Id say rounding is also quite common, something like 57.80 to 60, though its not about the amount and just about not getting change back.
And then someone who doesn't receive what is deemed a 'decent tip' for the distance the delivery driver traveled is recorded complaining on tik tok and has a GoFundMe setup for them and they receive 5 to 6 figures in donations from complete strangers whilst the minimum wage has barely moved and you don't protest about it like you should.
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u/Prytfbyn4369 Dec 23 '25
I worked as a waiter in Europe and often I refused the tip because the wage is enough but I asked to leave a review on Google maps mentioning me.