So we're just seven months out from meeting up at our Villa in Provence, and we know some of you are heading over even earlier to spend some time in Paris... and others are heading out early to spend a few days along the coast of The French Riviera! With that in mind, we wanted to pass along some "Tipping Advice"... This never seems very important until you've finished that first meal and the check comes... Then all of a sudden, it seems very important!
Traveling in a foreign country can be slightly intimidating, but it doesn't have to be... you might not know the language, and likely you're not 100% familiar with the local customs or culture... This is normal, and we see it as our job to "get you mentally prepared" so that you have a better feel for what's happening around you!
Just a few tips on tipping... |
Our goal has always been to overcome these issues, and we use this BLOG as our main conduit to prepare you by feeding you just one spoonful at a time... If you've been following along, you may not realize it, but you're already far ahead of most Americans who travel to France... You've already read a lot of customized articles addressing the who, what, when, where and why's of your Tour... And we're just getting started! We'll be posting at least another 50 - 60 articles before you leave for France! If you continue to follow along with the BLOG, you'll be an expert by your departure... And that is our goal! As always, please reach out to us if you have questions, or if we can help in any way!
We call this "The French Flinch" Don't succumb to the French Flinch... |
Tipping in restaurants in France... Probably one of the most heavily debated and argued topics among frequent international travelers... And with this in mind, we're going to try to give you a little confidence with your tipping practices...
Know this first & foremost: In 2008, the French Government put in place a law that requires most restaurants and cafes to add a service charge to the bill, this allows them to tax tips. Known in French as Service compris, the restaurant will usually add around 15% to the bill, and while it most often applies to restaurants, it can also be added in other instances. You will not see this 15% indicated on your bill... By French law it is added to the menu price of each individual item you order. It generally doesn’t go directly to the waitstaff though. But in concept, this service charge is indeed in place to help pay their salary.
To truly understand this topic, you must first talk about the French Culture and what local French people do in their daily lives... Here in the US, most of us know and understand that our waiters & waitresses get paid a lower base wage and depend on gratuities for their living... And that gratuity over the years has pretty much become a standard of 15 to 20%, and it's often the minimum expected whether you got special service or not... In France, waiters & waitresses are professionals and they get paid a full wage, and could never make it on tips because in their culture, they just don't tip very much, if at all... and they're not necessarily expected to do so...
Generally, French waiters aren’t going to tell you their name and check on you multiple times throughout the meal and keep refilling your water. They do their job appropriately — what’s normal for French culture — and get paid for it. It’s not a well-paid job or one that will make someone rich, but it’s a job and waiters have a work contract and are compensated via a salary. You can leave a small tip as a gesture of appreciation for great service.
For the most part, most native French do not tip very much... It's just not part of their culture... In a restaurant, they'll often just leave "the change." IF they got really good service... Perhaps if their check is 37 euro, they'll just leave 40 euro... (around 5%). Seriously, a lot of French do not tip at all... We're talking zero... zilch... notta! It's not that they're cheap; it's just not a thing in France. And quite honestly, most French waiters don't expect a tip... (except from Americans... more on this later)What complicates all of this is that most American tourists, over the last 70 years, who don't understand this issue, feel guilty not tipping, and leave the typical 15 - 20% tip that they would in the US... This has created a very weird, hard to explain "double standard" where many waiters and waitresses (especially in the bigger cities like Paris) while knowing full well they'll get little or no tips from their fellow Frenchmen, will still expect Americans to leave big tips...
So this is what makes the debate go on forever; Your typical American, feeling guilty about not tipping, will end up asking the waiter; "Is the tip included?" Now you have to understand this: the service and tax are both included in the price you see on the menu (indicated by the words service compris, and it’s 15%). So they legitimately will tell you "No, the tip is not included..." because it is not! So the American leaves a 15 - 20% tip on the table! And this is why this issue is debated so heavily all over the internet!
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There's no place on a French Credit Card bill to add a tip, so if you want to leave a tip, you'll want to leave it in cash... |