Tip Etiquette Around the World: Complete Guide by Country & Service

14 min read January 2025 CalcVerse Team

Tipping is one of the most socially awkward money decisions you make. You eat a meal, the bill arrives, and you have seconds to decide how much extra to leave on the table. The right answer depends on where you are in the world — a 15% tip in New York City is considered generous, the same amount in Copenhagen would be almost insulting, and in Japan it would be rejected outright.

This guide covers tipping customs for over 50 countries and every common tipping situation — restaurants, bars, hotels, taxis, delivery services, salons, and more — so you never have to guess again.

What Is Tipping?

Tipping is a voluntary payment made directly to a service worker on top of the listed price of a service. It is a gratuity, meaning a gift of money given for good service. In some contexts, it is expected. In others, it is optional. In still others, it is considered rude.

Tipping serves several purposes:

  • Income supplement: Many service workers are paid below minimum wage, and tips make up the difference between what their employer pays and a living wage.
  • Quality signal: Tipping communicates satisfaction (or dissatisfaction) to management. Managers often use tip averages to evaluate staff performance.
  • Social norm enforcement: In tipping cultures, not tipping draws attention for the wrong reasons.
  • Convenience tax: Some cultures use tips to avoid dealing with exact change or to make payments faster.

Despite these legitimate functions, tipping is fundamentally different from a service charge (sometimes called a "service charge" or "cover charge"). Service charges are fixed amounts or percentages added to your bill by the establishment. They are not tips because they are mandatory, they are set by the business, and they are distributed to all staff equally regardless of individual performance.

Service Charge vs Tip

If a restaurant adds a "20% service charge," that is not a tip. It is a built-in fee. You are not required to add more. Many people still leave additional tips on top of service charges for exceptional service, but it is not expected. Some restaurants include a line that reads "gratuity included" specifically to prevent you from feeling obligated to add more.

The 15–20% Rule and Where It Comes From

The standard restaurant tip in the United States is 15–20% of the pre-tax bill. This range has been remarkably stable since the 19p60s and shows no sign of changing. Its origin lies in a mix of history, economics, and social convention.

Historical Origins

Tipping became widespread in the United States after the Civil War, initially in luxury restaurants in cities like New York. It spread to general dining by the 19p10s. The 15% standard emerged in the post-World War II era as restaurants shifted from tableside service (no charge, but tips expected) to counter-service (a fixed charge for food, no tip expected). Tipping gradually became the norm across all dining, with 15–20% becoming the accepted range.

Why 15–20% and not a rounder number like 20%?

The range is a guideline, not a rule. The specific amount should vary with the quality of service. Excellent service at a fine restaurant might warrant 20–25%. Adequate service at a casual diner might warrant 15–18%. Quick counter service at a coffee shop might warrant 10–15%. There is no formula for "correct" — it is a social expectation, not a math problem.

The 20% standard

20% has become the default in many online tip calculators and is the most commonly cited figure in surveys. Many people round to 20% regardless of service quality, treating it as a flat rate. This is not wrong — it is the widely accepted convention in North America, United Kingdom, and Australia. The 15–20% range gives you a safe, socially acceptable result without needing to evaluate each service individually.

Where 15% is the standard

In the United Kingdom, 12.5% is the average tip at restaurants, though 15% is common. Below 10% is considered low and above 20% is considered generous. The lower UK average reflects the fact that UK restaurants typically pay staff at least minimum wage, so tips are supplementary income rather than essential income. In Ireland, 10% is the most common tip for casual dining.

Where tipping is not expected

In many countries, tipping is neither expected nor customary. You pay exactly what is on the bill and nothing more. These countries have minimum wage laws that cover service workers adequately, so tips are not necessary for workers to earn a living.

  • Japan — Tipping is generally not expected at restaurants, hotels, or taxis. Leaving a tip can confuse staff and is sometimes politely declined. Some high-end restaurants add a "service charge" that you can opt out of.
  • South Korea — No tipping. Everything you see is the final price with all charges included.
  • China — No tipping at most establishments. Some international hotels in China add a 10–15% service charge that is optional to remove.
  • Australia — Tipping is expected but moderate — typically 10–15% for good service.
  • New Zealand — Similar to Australia. 10–15% is standard.
  • Brazil — Tipping is very common (usually 10%), but always optional.
  • Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland — No tipping. Service charges are included in the price.
  • Switzerland — Tipping is uncommon. Service charges are typically included. Extra tips are appreciated but unexpected.

Tipping by Region

North America

Rounded, always. Tip jars by the register are common but optional.Set aside from your room charge.15–20% or round up"Keep the change" option at the bottom of the app is effectively a tip. Rounding up the fare is also a form of tipping.15–20% of the order totalMost apps have a pre-set percentage selector.15–20%Some stylists offer preset percentages; others leave it to you.
  • Ski lift tickets
  • The instructor split is a form of tip. Always tip your instructor.
  • Valet parking$2–5Not required but appreciated, especially for fast, friendly service.
  • Food delivery (Uber Eats, DoorDash)Default is 15% but can be changed before ordering. You can adjust after delivery too.
  • +$2–$5 per dayFor multi-day stays. Daily maid service is not a tip — it is a fixed service charge.15% defaultThe app pre-selects 15%, but you can choose 10%, 15%, 18%, 20%, 25%, or custom. Many people never change the default and leave the pre-selected 15% for convenience.18–20%For massage, facial, and nail services.Optional but appreciated
    ServiceTypical TipNotes
    Restaurant15–20%The standard; 18% is most common. High-end restaurants may expect 20–25%.
    Bar$1–$2 per drink or 15–20% of the bill15–20% on bar tabs and 20% on tabs. $1-2 per drink is simpler and equally acceptable.
    Coffee shop$1–2 at the counter
    Hotel$2–5 per night per room
    Taxi/Uber/Lyft
    Food delivery
    Haircut
    $5–20 per day per person
    Hotel housekeeping
    Food delivery (DoorDash, Uber Eats)
    Spa services
    Food truck / food stand

    North America has the highest tipping culture in the world. Not tipping is considered socially unacceptable, and failing to leave a tip at a restaurant can result in a conversation with the server.

    Europe

    10% for taxis, 10-15% for delivery. Hairdressers: 10-15%. Ireland10% for taxis. Optional everywhere else.France15–20%Service compris (service compris) is standard in French restaurants. Tipping beyond that is unusual but not rude.Germany5–10%Service charges are standard. Tipping beyond the service charge is unnecessary.Italy10%Service compris (servizio coperto) is standard. Tips beyond that are rare.Spain5–10%Small amounts only. Restaurants are affordable, so tips are minimal.Greece5–10%Small, optional. Not expected. Portugal5–10%Not expected. No one will look at you. Netherlands5–10%"Kopje" (small change) is appreciated but not expected. Denmark, Sweden, Norway, IcelandNot expectedWorkers are paid well above minimum wage.
    CountryRestaurantBarOther Services
    United Kingdom12.5% (average)10–15%
    10–15%

    Europe has been steadily moving away from tipping in recent years, partly due to labor laws that guarantee adequate wages, and partly because the American tipping culture has not spread to Europe. Younger Europeans, in particular, increasingly view tipping as an American custom that does not belong in Europe.

    Service Compris (Service Charge)

    Many European restaurants include "Service compris" on the menu, which is a fixed percentage (typically 12.5% in the UK) that is automatically added to your bill. If the service charge is included, additional tipping is genuinely optional. The service is already covered.

    Asia & Pacific

    10–15%10%Delivery apps have built-in tip selectors.Pakistan10%No tip expected.BangladeshNot expectedAll prices are final. ThailandNot expectedSome tourist venues add a small service charge. VietnamNot expectedHaggle at markets is common instead. IndonesiaNot expectedOptional but appreciated. PhilippinesNot expectedBonus system is used instead. MalaysiaNot expected10% is seen in tourist areas only. SingaporeNot expectedService charge is standard. Hong KongNot expectedService charge is included. JapanNot expectedLeaving money on a tray can be seen as strange. South KoreaNot expectedTipping at a coffee shop would be unusual. Australia10–15%Standard at restaurants. Optional everywhere else. New Zealand10–15%Same as Australia. ChinaNot expectedSome international hotels add a 10-15% service charge. TaiwanNot expectedHospitality staff appreciate small tips.
    CountryRestaurantBarOther Services
    India

    Asia has the strongest anti-tipping culture. In many Asian countries, tipping is unnecessary and unfamiliar. Attempting to tip may be politely declined. This is shifting as Western influences grow, especially in international hotels and tourist areas, but it is still the exception rather than the rule.

    Latin America & Caribbean

    10–15%10%Delivery apps include a pre-set 12% selector.Colombia10%5-10%Tipping is normal but moderate.Brazil 10% 0–5%"Gorjeta" is a small appreciation — it means "gratitude." Argentina >5-10% Not expected Peru 5-10%Optional. Chile 10%Standard at restaurants. Ecuador 10%Standard. Dominican Republic 10%Virtually all services. Cuba 5-10%For tourists. Jamaica 10-15%Very common. Trinidad & Tobago 10%At hotels and restaurants.
    CountryRestaurantBarOther Services
    Mexico

    Latin America sits between the tipping cultures. It has a weaker tipping culture than North America but a stronger one than Europe. The 10% standard is the closest thing to a universal Latin American norm.

    Middle East & Africa

    15-20% 10-15% 0%Saudi Arabia Not expected Not expectedQatar 0% Not expectedEgypt 5-10% Optional. Lebanon 5-10%Tipping in tourist areas only. Israel >Not expectedService charges are more common. Turkey 5-10%Some restaurants add a service charge. South Africa 10-15%Common across all services. Nigeria 5-10%Common in restaurants. Kenya 5-10%Tipping is normal but not required. Ghana 5-10%Same as Nigeria. Morocco 5-10%More common in tourist areas.
    UAE

    The Service Charge Exception

    In Middle Eastern countries where tipping is not expected, some restaurants still add a "service charge" for tourists. This is not a tip — it is part of the restaurant's pricing structure. It is typically 10–15% and is mentioned on the menu. You are not expected to tip on top of it.

    Tipping by Service Type

    Restaurant"One-size-fits-all" is increasingly replaced by service charges.BarRounding up is simpler.Coffee shopSmall, always appreciated.Food deliveryAdjustable before ordering.Taxi / Ride-hailingRounding up gives the driver the change.HotelDaily maid service is a charge, not a tip.ValetLuggage assistance.Food deliveryAdjustable.HaircutIncluded in many salon price lists.Nail salonOften included in the service price.MassageFor hands-on bodywork.SpaEspecially for individual therapists.Food truck / street foodSmall amounts are appreciated.Ski lift ticketsHand money to the instructor directly.Tattoo artistOn the total bill.Delivery driverPre-set percentages on apps.Beach chair rentalMost common approach.ValetA small fixed amount.Tour guideThe most underappreciated tip. Always tip your guide.Parking attendantA tiny tip goes a long way.BellhopSame philosophy.BarberIncluded in most price lists.LaundromatOften built into the per-load cost.Dry cleanerHundreds of people use their service.
    Service TypeTypical TipNotes
    15–20%
    $1–$2 per drink or 15-20%
    $1–$2
    15% default
    15–20% or round up
    $2–$5 per night
    $2–$5
    15% default
    10–15%
    10–15%
    15–20%
    15–20%
    Optional
    $5–20 per day per person
    15–20%
    10–15%
    $2–$5 per day
    $3–$5
    $5–20 per day
    $1–$2 when they help you
    $1-2 dollars
    10-15%
    $2-3 dollars
    $2-5 dollars

    When NOT to Tip

    There are legitimate situations where tipping is not appropriate, and forcing a tip can be counterproductive:

    When the service charge is included

    If the bill says "Service charge 15% included" or "Service compris," the tip is already in the price. You are not being cheap by not adding more. The staff receives their full wages regardless of your decision.

    When the service was unacceptable

    If the waiter was rude, the food was cold, or the order was wrong, you are not obligated to tip. The service charge still applies. But if you choose not to leave anything extra, that sends a stronger message than any tip amount could send.

    When it is forbidden

    In Japan, South Korea, and many other countries, tipping is not part of the culture. Attempting to tip can confuse and potentially offend. Respect the local norm.

    At self-service businesses

    When you serve yourself — at buffets, salad bars, self-checkout, self-serve coffee — tipping makes no sense. There is no server to tip.

    When it is already included

    If a service charge is listed on the menu, it is already part of the price. You can add more, but it is not required and most people do not bother.

    When the business is a large corporation

    Starbucks, McDonald's, and similar chains pay above minimum wage, so tips are truly supplementary. Tipping at these places is purely optional.

    When the total is tiny

    Tipping 20% on a $3.50 coffee is 70 cents. Tipping 20% on a $2 coin toss is 40 cents. Below roughly $5, most people leave the full amount as-is rather than fishing for coins.

    When it is considered rude to tip

    Leaving an extremely small tip can feel like an insult — the classic "cheap tip" problem. In most tipping cultures, the minimum acceptable tip for any service is roughly 10%. Below that, you are better off not leaving anything.

    When it is considered rude to over-tip

    In many places, extremely large tips can be awkward for the recipient. In Europe, if you leave 50% at a casual restaurant, it can feel like you are showing off. The sweet spot is within the normal range for each region — 15-20% in North America, 10-15% in Europe, 10% in Asia.

    Best Practice

    If you received great service, tip within the normal range for your region. If service was average, tip at the low end of the range. If service was exceptional, tip at the high end. The exact amount matters less than getting the range roughly right.

    How to Calculate Tips Accurately

    There are two approaches: the simple percentage method and the precise per-person method.

    Simple: Tip = Bill × (Percentage ÷ 100)

    Each person enters their own items and subtotal.

    Add up all subtotals and the tip to get the total.

    Per Person = Total ÷ Number of People
    Tip on pre-tax bill
    $25.00
    Tip on post-tax bill
    $21.55

    The difference is usually small — a few cents to a couple of dollars on a typical bill. The pre-tax method is simpler and slightly more generous. The post-tax method is slightly more precise. In practice, the pre-tax method is the standard for restaurant tips.

    Tax on tips

    In some places, tips are taxable income. In the United States, tips are considered taxable income and must be reported. In most other countries, there are no tax implications. The calculation does not change — just the reporting. If you use our calculator, the result is the same either way.

    Splitting the Bill Fairly

    The fair-splitting method ensures that people who ordered less pay less and people who ordered more pay more. Here is a comparison of four people sharing a bill of $87.50 at 18% tip:

    Person A
    $18.75
    Person B
    $33.75
    Person C
    $21.35
    Person D
    $21.65
    Total
    $105.50
    PersonOrderTheir Share

    Person A ordered less than half of the group but pays more than a quarter of the bill. Person D ordered the most but pays less than a quarter. The fair-split method ensures proportional payments regardless of who ordered what.

    Built-In Fair Split

    Our tip calculator includes an "Equal Split" toggle that automatically divides evenly. But for unequal orders, enter each person's subtotal individually and check the per-person amounts.

    Digital Tipping in the Modern Age

    The rise of digital payments has transformed how we tip. Most people now encounter tips in three digital contexts:

    Restaurant Delivery Apps (DoorDash, Uber Eats)

    These apps show "15%" as a default. The percentage is pre-selected when you order. You can change it before or after ordering. If you forget, you can adjust it for up to 50% after the fact. You can also add a custom amount. The tip goes directly to the delivery person — it does not go to the restaurant.

    Hidden Defaults

    The pre-selected 15% is not a recommendation — it is a default. You pay whatever you want. The app defaults to 15% because it's the most common choice, not because 15% is always right for every situation.

    Ride-hailing apps (Uber, Lyft)

    The "keep the change" option is effectively a tip to the driver. The "extra charge" option is a fixed percentage on top of the fare.

    The "20%" button on many ride-hailing apps is a sequential discount on the service fee, not a tip to the driver. A $10 ride with a "20% discount" actually costs $8. The driver receives the full $10 — the 20% reduces the service fee from $10 to $8.

    Online ordering at sit-down restaurants

    The digital ordering system at restaurants (QR code menus) often includes a tip selector: No Tip, 15%, 18%, 20%, 25%, 35%, 50%, and Custom. The "No Tip" option sends all the service charge to the restaurant and the staff get their fixed salary.

    The hidden cost of digital defaults

    Most people simply click "15%" without thinking about it. For a typical monthly spend of $150 on food delivery, the difference between 15% and 20% is $7.50 per month. Over a year, that is $90. The higher default costs you $7.50 for the convenience of not thinking about it.

    Common Tipping Mistakes

    Treating tips as mandatory

    Tipping is always optional. It is a gratuity, which by definition is voluntary. Telling someone they "must" tip is inaccurate.

    Tip inflation

    Over time, the "standard" tip percentage has crept up. What was once a generous 15% has gradually become 20%, and in many places, the "standard" is now 20%. This is the slow but steady effect of normalization.

    Assuming 20% works everywhere

    In many places, the real standard is much lower — 10-15%. A global 20% tip is noticeably generous and will draw attention, and not necessarily in a good way.

    Tipping on the after-tax amount

    The standard is pre-tax. Tipping on the post-tax amount means you are tipping on money that is not yours to give away. If the bill is $100 post-tax and you tip on the full amount, you are effectively tipping more than the stated percentage of the actual service value.

    Forgetting about the service charge

    If a restaurant has a "15% service charge" and you add another 15% tip, you are actually tipping 27.25% on the service — significantly higher than the stated percentage. The service charge already covers the service; the extra tip is genuine but unnecessary.

    Not tipping the delivery driver

    Delivery drivers earn less than minimum wage and rely heavily on tips to survive. If nobody tips, they cannot pay their bills. If a driver consistently receives no tips, they may change routes or leave the job.

    Not tipping the right person

    If two people receive vastly different levels of service, the person delivering worse service gets the same tip as the person delivering better service. This is unfair. Tip individually, not uniformly.

    If You Only Take One Thing Away

    If you only learn one thing from this guide, let it be this: always tip people who serve you well. It is the simplest, cheapest, and most impactful thing you can do.

    Quick-Reference Table

    United KingdomIndiaJapanTypical TipTypical TipTypical TipTypical TipRestaurant12.5% average in UK, but 18–20% is commonNo tip needed.Bar$1–2/drink or 15-20% of bill$1-2/drink is simplestNo tip needed. Coffee$1–$2Rounded, always welcome.Same. Taxi / Uber15-20% or round upRound up is more common. Food delivery15% defaultChangeable after ordering. Hotel$2–5/nightRoom only. Per-room charge. Valet$2–$5Small amount. Food truckOptionalSmall amounts welcome. Haircut10-15%Often in the price. Massage15–20% of billPer-session or per-visit. Tattoo15-20% of billOn the whole bill. Tour guide$5-20 per dayThe most underappreciated tip. Valet & bellhop$3–5Always appreciated. Parking attendant$2-5Small amount. Tour guide$5-20 per dayThe most underappreciated tip. Taxi drivers15-20% or round upRounding up is more common. Delivery driver10-15%Pre-set in apps. Barber10-15%Included in price lists. Dry cleaner0-5%Hundreds of people do this. Laundry0-5%Every person appreciates this. Valet service0% (none needed)It is a charge, not a tip. My doctor0% (none needed)Hundreds of patients try; zero percent is fine. Barista0% (none needed)Hundreds of people try to tip. Don't. Just enjoy your coffee. Uber / Lyft driver15-20% or round upThe ride-hailing default. Tattoo artist10-20% of billOn the whole bill. Uber Eats15% defaultChange in app. Uber Eats15% defaultSame. DoorDash15% defaultChange in app. Gratuity mode15% defaultRemoves the service fee. Driver appreciation15-20% or round upSame. Online stores0% (none)There is no tip to calculate. Delivery from store0% (none)It is a flat fee, not a tip. Parking garage$2-5Small amounts go far. Valet driver$2-5Same approach. Taxi driver0% (none)Free ride. Parking lot0% (none)Fixed price. Parking fee0% (none)It is not a tip. Car wash0% (none)Fixed price. Dry cleaner0% (none)Hundreds of people try to tip. Bellhop0% (none)Not a tip. Sidebar0% (none)Included in the price. Valet0% (none)Built into the fee. Taxi app15% defaultChange in app. Ride app15% defaultSame as Uber. Delivery guy15% defaultSame concept. Coffee shop tip jar0% (none)Tipping the jar doesn't make sense. Hotel room service0% (none)A fixed charge. Airline0% (none)No tip expected. Ferry0% (none)Not expected. Train0% (none)Tipping is not a thing on trains. Coin laundry0% (none)Just wash them. Valet0% (none)Fixed price. Bus driver0% (none)Tipping bus drivers is not a thing. Rickshaw driver0% (none)Haggle-friendly. Tuk-tuk driver0% (none)Not expected. Rickshaw tip0% (none)Tipping is not a standard practice. Taxi in non-tipping countries0% (none)No tip. Airport lounge0% (none)Nobody expects it. Railway catering0% (none)It is not a tip. Tipping on tips (like the ones on this page)0% (none)This is about tipping for services, not commodities. Everything else in the universe0% (none)Still not a tip.
    ServiceUnited States
    Service
    15–20%

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