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My last haircut + beard trim was about $40 CAD, and I tipped 20%.
Now I tend to go to nicer places, so the price is a bit higher than Magicuts or something. My hair is also a pain to deal with so I generally tip well.
I know I’m not the target of this question but I can’t imagine tipping a hairdresser.
I imagine it’s a US thing.
“Hi, could I pay you to cut my hair?”
Snip snip
“Thanks mate, could I pay you again please”
I genuinely do not fuckin understand
Every once in a while, a post from a service employee would surface on r/popular on Reddit, and you’d get a glimpse of how they really feel about tips and people who tip badly or don’t tip. They absolutely will retaliate against people they know don’t tip up to their expectations, but they will never share their expectations with their customers.
Granted, this is a slice of the total population of service workers who are complaining on a public forum. Still, would you risk your hair, or your food, or your time to someone who decides you’re not keeping up your end of the social contract? Not me! If I go to a place regularly, I tip even if the service is bad, because I won’t take the chance of being retaliated against.
It sucks.
Sorted that for you mate, have a great evening.
It is an American issue. Many restaurants here pay servers just over $2 per hour with the expectation that the rest will be made up in tips. During the pandemic we (people who were still getting a paycheck) started tipping generously to help people who were picking up gig work because their regular job was closed and also to thank the places who found ways to safely stay open. When the pandemic ‘ended’ the over-tipping and expectation of tips didn’t. Now it’s kind of out of control IMO.
At a restaurant, if it isn’t made up in tips, the restaurant has to pay them the difference
That’s the genius of “gig” work. There aren’t any laws saying they have to pay them because they’re considered contractors
The restaurant is supposed to pay the difference. You’re likely to be accused of not reporting cash tips or made to feel like shit because you can’t earn __$/hr.
Until they get reported, it’s going to keep happening, unfortunately
10€ and tipping in not a thing. You would get a long stare if you asked about it.
$30 (US) and I tip 30% but that’s mostly because I really like my barber and I know that he doesn’t make a ton of money.
Last time I had a haircut it was advertised as ± 14 eur. But I couldn’t just get a haircut, they needed to wash it, put stuff in it etc. Ended up paying around 30 euros. It was my only haircut in the last 15 years and damn prices went up a lot
In Czech Republic, I think the price is usually around 500 CZK (~25 USD).
You can get one of the really cheap ones for 100-200 CZK (~8-10 USD) but I’ve only used one of these once.
I never tipped a hairdresser in my life, I don’t think it’s really customary here in Czech Republic. Last time I went to hairdresser I overheard previous customer trying to tip them but they said it can’t be done (he was paying by card) and that it’s OK.
This US culture of tipping everyone everywhere is strange to me; I never visited US but I imagine this would feel just so awkward to me. In Czech Rep. the tipping culture has been almost exclusively restricted to restaurants where waiter is actively serving you, ie. not fast-foods where you buy your food at the counter, wait for it, bring it to your table, clean up after yourself (if you have some self-respect, that is), etc.
<rant>
Recently Forky’s in Brno has been asking for tips on payment terminal – far earlier than you can even see your food – which I find just rude and it caused me to basically stop going there.</rant>
Swede reporting in: I think my last haircut was ca 450 SEK (~42USD), it’s not customary to tip for haircuts here, in fact it would be quite weird.
For some reason i like this question.
£12 for the haircut. £3 to wax my ears and nose. I give them £5 tip because of the atmosphere, care they take and they’ve got the balance between talking and staying quiet just right.
I get my hair buzz cut by a family member. Cost: 20$ for the electric cutters and 0.001c per cut in electric.
€8-10 in Spain, no tip because I’m not American. $2.50 in Cambodia. Otherwise whatever I see, but I don’t get it cut often.
My haircut is $30 and I tip $10.
I know people don’t understand tipping, but that whole $30 isn’t going to him
I pay about 400 mxn which at current usdmxn rate is like 24 usd, tipping is not customary here unless at restaurants.
My husband pays 30 USD and tips 5-6 bucks. He’s been seeing the same stylist for years and really likes her. If it were a stranger he would probably tip $0-5 depending on the cut/service.
15€ in Italy, where tips aren’t common
$50 in Chicago.