I read somewhere that the standard tip these days is 20 percent for a full-service meal. Full service meaning a wait person gives you a menu at the table, delivers water, comes to the table to take your order, delivers the food when it's ready, brings a check and accepts payment at the table.
These days, at many places, you have to place the order on a screen, and before you know what kind of service you might get, they thrust a choice of tips at you right there n the screen. A recent choice included tips of either 18, 20, 25 or 28 percent. Then the give you a little electronic gizmo so that when your food is ready, you go to a counter and pick it up yourself.
On the other hand, I note that restaurants are having difficulty filling positions. When I go into a restaurant, I generally have no idea what that particular restaurant is paying for help. I know that the minimum wage for waiters and waitresses is considerably less than the minimum wage for most workers, with the assumption being that they will make up the difference through tips. I've heard that, though they get paid less in wages, they get taxed on the assumption that they did make up the difference in tips - whether that is true in all cases or not.
Is tipping getting out of hand? Is anybody writing about it on SOL?