The Tipping Debate: Americans Divided on Etiquette and Control
A Bankrate survey reveals that 30% of Americans believe tipping in the US has become "out of control," with even self-checkout machines now asking for tips. While 41% of respondents think businesses should pay employees better instead of relying heavily on tips, 32% are annoyed by pre-entered tip screens. Tipping frequency has been declining since 2019, with 73% of adults always tipping at sit-down restaurants in 2022 compared to 77% in 2019. Researchers suggest that companies are using tips to shift the responsibility of fair wages onto consumers. However, nearly half of Americans still tip at least 20% at sit-down restaurants. The increase in negative sentiment has led some business owners to reduce suggested tip amounts or remove the option altogether.
- 'It's more than fatigue': 30% of Americans say tipping in the US is 'out of control' — even self-checkout machines now ask for tips. Do you agree? Yahoo Finance
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- Just 65% of Americans always tip at restaurants—etiquette experts on what we get wrong about tipping CNBC
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