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How much do you tip the person who delivers your food?

With food delivery, do you tip a percentage like you do at a restaurant or do you tip a fixed dollar amount? My friends and I weren't sure when we discussed this issue last night.

21 Comments:

20%, round up.

Depending on how long the delivery guy has to travel. 15 to 20%

$5, as a general rule. More if it's really bad weather - or they have a lot to carry. Less if they take to long or if they have spilled something.

20%, round up

$5?! That's crazy. 20%, round up, and sometimes I do a little more if it's really bad weather.

Hmmm. Well here was the nature of our discussion last night: 20% is what we tip a waiter at a restaurant. This is for the work involved in serving an entire meal--a meal that often takes over an hour to complete. The job of delivering food is always the same: the same bag is carried to your apt regardless of how much you order. If you order $5 worth of food or $100 worth of food, it's the same work involved for the delivery person (give or take the extra weight of the bag.) If you order $10 worth of food, should you only tip $2? Similarly, if you order $100 worth of food, should you really tip $20? I think it's a complicated issue.

Why is $5 crazy? What's the average take out bill in NYC - I live in Brooklyn and sometimes $5 could be more than 20% of the bill.

20% is too high for a delivery tip. I usually have three levels of tipping for subpar service, expected service and exceptional service. When I dine out it's 15-25%, when I order in it's 10-20%. For both of those, the complexity weighs in. If someone's walking half a block, they'll get a lower tip.

There's no comparison to a waiter in a restaurant, in my view, so just throw that out a window as any kind of barometer. I don't do percentages on these guys - they brought the food up, thanks for that. There's almost no verbal give-and-take with a delivery guy, so I don't overthink it because they don't get much from me, period. My method is to round up the total bill by no more than $3. E.g., if the check is $21.18, I give him $24; if the check is $20.76, I give him $23. On top of that, you must develop the stones to ask for odd, even measly amounts back as change in order to follow your tipping Code: e.g., if the check is $26.44, he's getting $29 and I have no prob. asking for that last $1 back if I have $30 to pay with. (One exception: exceptionally rough delivery weather like heavy rain or snow will typically get an extra $1 out of me, but it's still got to be a figure with a 4 in front.)

Perhaps I was too hasty with the general "$5 is crazy" response. I assumed you meant $5 as a rule, no matter what your ordered. That seems crazy. But if your total bill is $10 or $15, $5 isn't crazy. If your bill is $25 or $30, then I do think it's too little.

$3 seems really crazy to me, especially as a rule. It seems really low.

Bad weather is the only thing that gets more than just a simple round-up from me. 20%? what for? half the time the delivery menu has a markup anyway.

Did I mention my name's not Rockefeller over here? megnut, what difference does it make to your delivery guy what the total amount of your bill was? Whether it's $5 or $50, he's humping your bag, a bag, to your door. Therefore, for the same task each time, he gets the same tipping Code. "Man needs a Code." -Omar Little A waiter in a restaurant, by contrast, operates by different rules of convention and theoretically works more on a bigger check than on a smaller check, so he gets a bigger gross amount as the check goes up. You give your delivery guy a $5 tip on a $10 check, and go up from there?? Must be nice...

Megnut, are you in NYC? I think for those of us who are, there is a little different delivery/price thing going on. I tip same as Sandro round up plus $2 except I'll add a couple more for bad weather. 99% of the time I'm getting delivery, the guy is walking no more than 3 blocks to deliver it, and the bill is no more than $20.

what difference does it make to your delivery guy what the total amount of your bill was

Well depending on how much the difference is, it could mean he's carrying more stuff, heavier stuff, more of a pain, more packages, etc.

I am in NYC, and I guess I feel like it's a real privilege to sit on my lazy ass watching TV and have someone bring me food to my door. Someone who's probably making minimum wage, (who knows, maybe even less if he's illegal and delivering for a sketchy place, many restaurants underpay their kitchen staff, so I've assumed the same could be true for delivery people) busting his hump to get me my food while it's still hot, often when it's too cold or rainy for me to be bothered to go out my door to get something to eat. And I guess I feel like that warrants an extra dollar or two from my wallet when he gets it to me in a timely fashion. I'm not advocating Rockefeller-esque, slip-the-guy-a-$20 tips.

I will admit I'm a bit tipper though, I think that comes from working in the restaurant industry. When you see the hours people put in, both in the kitchen and as servers, when you realize that most people don't make anything close to a living wage for the amount they labor (yeah, tips are great when you're a server, but you're making $3 an hour, so if you're not at a high-end place, or you're not pulling the good shifts, you're not making much...), and you realize most people can't even afford health insurance, well, let me just say: it makes me more generous when I eat out.

Meg - very well said - hell deliverypeople in NYC are literally the bottom of the food chain. In my section of Brooklyn the vast majority of deliverypeople are newly arrived immigrants. I worked in food service years ago and I know how it feels to be treated like chattel property. So I tip generously to these folks because I know they need it and truly appreciate it. And schlepping food around in cold or foul weather on a bike, up and down hills, is no joke.

I tend to use 20% as a baseline. Sure, the person isn't delivering plates to my table, but really, the person's delivering plates to my house. They're not refilling my glasses, but they're making sure everything gets there together and that it's the right temperature. I figure I'm paying for the convenience of someone else going to get the food for me, and if I don't want to pay for it, then I go and do pick-up, not delivery. Of course, the 20% is also variable based on quality of service and difficulty of conditions. Interestingly, I've been at a couple large parties where we ordered so much food I found I did have an upper limit -- about $50.

Also, megnut's got a good point. I've not worked in the restaurant industry, but I grew up in Vegas, and you learn a thing or two about minimum wage and living off tips there.

For those who do not live in NYC or in a major city, we don't do major tipping. I know what your thinking but why? Ok I will tell you. I live in Bumbleep egypt. Drivers for the 3 places that deliver here make a min of &10.00 an hour plus tips. During the gas insanity earlier this year the local yocal pizza joint was also paying for one tank of gas per shift. The guy who owns it drives a Humvee and has a heart of gold. My fav pizza place doesn't deliver. It is five mins away so we make the trip.

How much do I tip? 2.00 for orders under 20.00 and 3.00 for orders over 20.00. Again I remind you we have 3 delivery places in 10 miles (Local Pizza Emporium, Dominos and Old Standby always open local pizza joint) and they usually bundle deliveries for the driver. When you call hey say 45-60 mins. This means they are taking all the orders for my area and consolidating them.

I am pea green with envy about the quality and assortment of take out those in NYC can have at the ready by just picking up a phone. So maybe you should tip bigger. But here in God's country we have very little assortment, the drivers get paid well and are happy for the 2.00.

This topic is all about location. Our chinese joint doesn't even make eggplant. When I asked for it they said no one eats that here. I had never been to a chinese restaurant that did not make some kind of eggplant. We are talking out in the woods.

I think 20% is a good baseline. My father worked on a case involving a pay dispute with Chinese takeout workers, and their pay is incredibly bad. Many of them get no base pay, and any returned orders (because it is wrong/broken, etc) are taken out of their money. Also, they have to pay the restaurant what the restaurant is owed out of what you give them (if you watch in NY -- you can see the delivery people paying the cashier before they take the orders), and even if you assume each order takes 15 minutes to and from, then that's only 4 orders/hour. If each person gave $3, that would be $12/hour, before the problems of people who can't find the right change, who try to send the food back etc. There's also no overtime, and in other cities (SF etc) where deliveries are made by car parking tickets are the responsibility of the server, which can often be hudnreds of dollars.

I don't feel liberal guilt. I don't think that I'm priviliged etc etc to get food delivery--to me, a job is a job. And you get paid to do your job. And honestly, often, I can't afford the tip, so I eat my canned soup or I go walk the three blocks to pick up my $4.50 stir-fry. But often you are their only paycheck, and so you should pay up.

I also think that restaurants should state a delivery charge. But they should also provide insurance, so good luck with that.

Fascinating thread. I know it's caused me to re-evaluate how I'll be calculating my delivery tips.

I think that perhaps a hybrid approach to tipping may work well. Strictly tipping based on the total bill doesn't take into account things like distance, weather, or promptness. Tipping a flat fee doesn't take into account the bulk, weight, or complexity of the order. How about:

10% of the total bill
+$1 for every one long block or three city blocks
+$2 if it's raining or snowing
+$2 if it's raining or snowing hard
-$5 if they're absurdly late, and it's not raining or snowing hard
-$2 if common areas have been littered with menus in the past

I won't deduct from the tip if items are missing, but I will make them go back for it, even if it's just a soda.

I suppose it would be helpful if I mentioned that these rules of thumb are specific to New York City, where deliveries are made by foot or bicycle.

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