Υπολογιστής Tip
Χρησιμοποιήστε Υπολογιστής Tip για γρήγορα και ακριβή αποτελέσματα.
Πώς να χρησιμοποιήσετε αυτήν την αριθμομηχανή
- Εισαγάγετε Bill Amount (€)
- Εισαγάγετε Tip (%)
- Εισαγάγετε Split Between
- Κάντε κλικ στο κουμπί Υπολογισμός
- Διαβάστε το αποτέλεσμα που εμφανίζεται κάτω από την αριθμομηχανή
How to Calculate a Tip
The tip formula is simple: Tip = Bill Amount × Tip Percentage. The total you pay is Total = Bill + Tip.
Quick mental calculation methods:
- 20% tip: Divide the bill by 5. €65 ÷ 5 = €13 tip
- 15% tip: Find 10% (move decimal left), then add half. 10% of €65 = €6.50, half = €3.25, total tip = €9.75
- 18% tip: Find 20% and subtract 10% of that. 20% of €65 = €13 minus €1.30 = €11.70
- Per-person split: Calculate tip first, then divide total by number of people. (€65 + €13) ÷ 4 = €19.50 per person
When splitting an unequal bill (different orders), each person should tip on their own portion to be fair. For large groups of 6+ people, many restaurants add an automatic 18–20% gratuity.
Tip Percentages by Service and Country
Tipping customs vary significantly by country and type of service:
| Service | US Standard | Excellent Service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full-service restaurant | 18–20% | 22–25% | Always tip servers — they earn below minimum wage in most US states |
| Counter service / casual | 0–15% | 15–18% | Optional; use your judgment |
| Bartender | €1–2 per drink or 15–20% | 20%+ | Tip per drink at a bar, % for table service |
| Food delivery | 15–20% | 20%+ | Pre-tip or post-tip; add more for long distances or bad weather |
| Taxi / rideshare (Uber/Lyft) | 15–20% | 20% | Rate in app; cash tips appreciated too |
| Hotel housekeeping | €2–5/night | €5–10/night | Leave daily — different staff may clean each day |
| Hairdresser / Barber | 15–20% | 20–25% | Tip even if owner is cutting your hair |
| Tattoo artist | 20–25% | 30%+ | Higher tip reflects skilled artistry |
International tipping: In Japan, tipping is considered rude and may be refused. In Australia and New Zealand, tipping is not customary (service is included in prices). In much of Europe, rounding up or a 5–10% tip is appreciated but not mandatory. The US has the most extensive tipping culture globally.
Bill Splitting Strategies for Groups
Group dining can get complicated. Here are the fairest approaches:
Method 1: Equal split
Total (with tip) ÷ number of people. Works best when everyone ordered similar amounts. Example: €240 total with €48 tip (20%) = €288 total ÷ 6 people = €48 each.
Method 2: Pay what you ordered
Each person calculates their own subtotal and tips on that amount. More accurate but requires more math. Apps like Splitwise, Venmo, or PayPal simplify this.
Method 3: One person pays, others Venmo
Easiest operationally. One person pays the full bill and collects from others via payment app. Avoid this if the payer earns rewards on their credit card while others use cash — the rewards effectively transfer from the group to one person.
For large groups: Many restaurants add automatic gratuity (18–20%) for groups of 6 or more. Check the bill before adding another tip on top.
Pre-Tax vs Post-Tax Tipping: The Debate
Should you tip on the pre-tax bill or the total including tax? The etiquette community is divided, but here is the practical breakdown:
- Tip on pre-tax: Technically correct by etiquette standards — servers do not provide the government's tax service. At 8% sales tax, the difference is small: on a €50 bill, pre-tax tip = €10 (20% of €50), post-tax tip = €10.80 (20% of €54).
- Tip on post-tax total: Most people do this because it is easier — just take a percentage of the final bill shown. The extra €0.00.80 makes little difference to you but is appreciated by the server.
The actual difference is minor — focus on being consistent and generous rather than optimizing pre vs post-tax. What matters more: is 20% of a €100 bill the right tip regardless of whether it is calculated on €100 or €108.
Tipping Apps and Credit Card Tips: Best Practices
Digital tipping has changed some dynamics worth understanding:
- Credit card tips at restaurants: The server typically receives the full tip, though many restaurants pool tips or have policies about credit card processing fees (illegal to deduct in some states).
- App-based tips (delivery, rideshare): Tips go directly to the worker. For delivery apps, pre-tip generously — drivers see the tip before accepting a delivery and may pass on low-tip orders.
- Square/iPad tip prompts: Counter service increasingly presents iPad tip screens with 20/25/30% as preset options. These are set intentionally high. 10–15% is perfectly appropriate for counter service; zero is acceptable for purely transactional interactions.
- Cash vs card tips: Cash tips are immediately in the server's pocket. Card tips may be distributed through tip pools or payroll cycles. In cash-heavy industries, cash is generally preferred.
The Economics of Tipping: Who Benefits?
The US tipping system has significant economic implications worth understanding:
- Minimum wage exemption: The federal "tipped minimum wage" is €2.13/hour for tipped workers — unchanged since 1991. Employers can pay this lower rate because tips are expected to make up the difference to standard minimum wage.
- Tip wage states: Seven states (California, Oregon, Washington, Minnesota, Montana, Alaska, Nevada) require full minimum wage regardless of tips, generally resulting in better server wages.
- Restaurant economics: Full-service restaurants typically operate on net margins of 3–9%. Labor is the largest cost (30–35% of revenue). When you tip 20%, roughly €1 of every €5 is discretionary service incentive — the only variable payment most servers have.
Understanding this economics argues for maintaining or slightly increasing tip percentages over time, as the cost of living for service workers has risen while the traditional 15% standard was set decades ago when €15 was worth more.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should I tip at a restaurant?
In the US, 18–20% is the current standard for full-service restaurants. 15% is acceptable for average service; 22–25%+ for exceptional service. Less than 15% sends a signal of dissatisfaction. Tip on the pre-tax subtotal or the full total — the difference is small.
How do I calculate a 20% tip quickly?
Divide the bill by 5. €65 ÷ 5 = €13. Or: move the decimal point left (that's 10% = €6.50), then double it (€13). Both methods give the same result.
Should I tip on the pre-tax or post-tax amount?
Either is acceptable. Tipping on the pre-tax amount is technically correct by etiquette standards, but the difference is small (about €0.00.80 extra on a €50 bill with 8% tax). Most people tip on the total for simplicity, which servers appreciate.
Is it rude not to tip?
In the US, yes — not tipping at a full-service restaurant is widely considered rude. Servers depend on tips for most of their income due to the sub-minimum tipped wage system. Not tipping at counter service, fast food, or self-service is generally acceptable.
How do I split a bill fairly with a large group?
For simplicity, divide the total (including tip) equally. For fairness when orders differ greatly, calculate each person's share individually and add a proportional tip. Apps like Splitwise, Venmo, or PayPal make this easy.
Do I tip if the restaurant adds a service charge?
Check if the service charge goes to the staff or the restaurant. If it goes to the server, an additional tip is optional but appreciated. If it goes to the restaurant (increasingly common), consider adding a small additional cash tip directly to your server.
What is a standard tip for food delivery?
15–20% is standard for food delivery. Add more for long distances, bad weather, large orders, or exceptional service. Note that delivery workers often see the tip before accepting your order — low tips may result in slower pickup or rejection. €5 is a reasonable minimum regardless of percentage for short deliveries.
Do I need to tip at a coffee shop or counter service?
Counter service tips are optional and appreciated, not obligatory like sit-down service. If you are a regular, tipping occasionally builds goodwill and may lead to better service. 10–15% or rounding up is appropriate. Ignoring the iPad tip prompt at pure counter service (bagging your own groceries, self-ordering kiosk) is entirely acceptable.
💡 Γνωρίζατε;
- Tipping originated in 16th-century England, where coffee house patrons placed coins in a tin labeled "To Insure Promptitude" (T.I.P.).
- Japan, South Korea, Iceland, and Switzerland are among the countries where tipping is considered unnecessary or even rude.
- The US relies on tipping to subsidize low server wages — the federal tipped minimum wage has been stuck at $2.13/hour since 1991.
Τελευταία ενημέρωση: March 2026