Free tip calculator showing bill amount, tip percentage and split per person

How Much to Tip in 2026: Complete Tipping Guide + Free Calculator

How Much to Tip in 2026: Complete Tipping Guide + Free Calculator

Tipping. It’s the small ritual at the end of almost every meal, ride, and service — and somehow, it stresses people out more than the bill itself. Is 15% still standard? What about delivery? What if you’re traveling? Who do you tip in cash vs. on the card?

Restaurant bill with cash tip showing how much to tip waiter

This complete 2026 tipping guide answers every common tipping question, with clear percentages for every type of service, country-by-country tipping rules for travelers, mental math shortcuts so you don’t need an app, and honest etiquette advice for situations no one teaches you.

👉 Want the answer right now? Use our free Tip Calculator — supports 25+ currencies, splits bills automatically, and shows a side-by-side comparison of common tip percentages.

The Quick Answer: Standard Tip Percentages in 2026

Here’s the cheat sheet — pin this and you’ll be set for 95% of situations in the US, Canada, and similar tipping cultures:

  • Sit-down restaurant: 15–20% (18% is the new normal)
  • Buffet: 10%
  • Takeout / counter pickup: 0–10% (optional)
  • Food delivery: 15–20%, $3–5 minimum
  • Bartender: $1–2 per drink, or 15–20% on a tab
  • Taxi / rideshare: 10–15%
  • Hair salon / barber: 15–20%
  • Spa / massage: 15–20%
  • Hotel housekeeping: $2–5 per night, left daily
  • Hotel bellhop: $1–2 per bag
  • Valet parking: $2–5 on return
  • Furniture delivery: $5–20 per person
  • Tour guide: 10–20% depending on tour length

Outside the US/Canada? Skip down to the country-by-country guide.

How to Calculate a Tip (With or Without a Calculator)

The Calculator Way (Recommended)

Our free tip calculator does this in 5 seconds:

  1. Enter your bill amount
  2. Choose how many people are splitting
  3. Pick a tip percentage (or use the slider)
  4. Done — see the tip, total, and per-person amount instantly

Quickly calculating a 15 percent restaurant tip using mental math

The Mental Math Way

Want to tip without pulling out your phone? Here are the shortcuts every adult should know:

The 10% Trick

Move the decimal one place left.

10% of $48.30 = $4.83.

The 15% Trick

Find 10%, then add half of that.

15% of $48.30 = $4.83 + $2.42 = $7.25.

The 18% Trick

Find 20% first (easier), then subtract 10% of that.

20% of $50 = $10. Minus $1 (10% of $10) = $9.

The 20% Trick

Find 10%, then double it.

20% of $48.30 = $4.83 × 2 = $9.66.

The 25% Trick

Divide by 4.

25% of $48 = $12.

Want to brush up on percentage math in general? Our Percentage Calculator covers every type of percent problem with step-by-step formulas.

Restaurant Tipping: The Deep Dive

Why Has 18% Become the New Standard?

Twenty years ago, 15% was the default. Today, 18% has quietly become the new minimum at most US sit-down restaurants. Several factors are driving this shift:

  • Servers’ tipped minimum wage has stayed low in many US states, making tips even more crucial.
  • Tip-out policies require servers to share with bartenders, bussers, and food runners.
  • Inflation on food prices doesn’t always translate to higher tips when people stick to flat percentages.
  • Default prompts on POS systems often start at 18%, 20%, and 25%, effectively training customers.

Should You Tip on Pre-Tax or Post-Tax?

The traditional etiquette answer: pre-tax. The modern practical answer: most people tip on the total.

The difference on a $50 bill with 8% tax is about $0.60–$0.80. It’s not significant unless you eat out frequently. Tip on whichever feels right to you — our calculator supports both.

Should You Tip the Same on Alcohol as Food?

Yes. The standard is to tip the same percentage on the entire bill (food, drinks, and tax), unless you ordered a single extremely expensive bottle of wine in which case some etiquette guides allow capping the tip on the wine at 10%.

What If the Service Was Bad?

Leave 10% — not zero. Most servers earn the bulk of their income from tips, and a zero leaves them paying tax on tips they didn’t actually receive (in tipped-credit states). If service was genuinely poor, speak with the manager so the situation is addressed — that does more good than skipping the tip.

What If Service Was Exceptional?

25–30% on a small bill, or whatever you can afford on a larger one. A handwritten note to the manager mentioning the server by name is also remembered far longer than a few extra dollars.

Tipping for Food Delivery and Rideshare

Food Delivery (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub, local)

Standard tip: 15–20%, with a $3–5 minimum even on small orders. Tip more if:

  • Weather is bad (rain, snow, extreme heat)
  • The drive is long
  • The order is large or heavy
  • You live in a hard-to-find place
  • The driver has to climb stairs

Important: Service fees on apps usually do NOT go to the driver. Tip separately.

Rideshare (Uber, Lyft, Bolt, local equivalents)

10–15% is standard. Round up to the nearest dollar at minimum. Tip more for:

  • Help with luggage
  • Friendly conversation (if welcome)
  • Late-night or early-morning rides
  • Long trips (airport runs especially)

World map showing tipping customs and percentages by country in 2026

Tipping Around the World: 2026 Country-by-Country Guide

Tipping customs vary enormously by country. Here’s what travelers need to know:

🇺🇸 United States & 🇨🇦 Canada

Tipping is essential and expected. 15–20% at restaurants. Servers often earn below minimum wage and depend on tips.

🇬🇧 United Kingdom

10–12.5% at restaurants. Often automatically added as a “service charge” — check the bill before adding more. At pubs, no tip is expected unless you receive table service.

🇫🇷 France, 🇮🇹 Italy, 🇪🇸 Spain, 🇩🇪 Germany

Service is typically included (“service compris” / “servizio incluso”). It’s polite to round up or leave 5–10% for good service. Don’t feel obligated to tip 20% as you would in the US.

🇯🇵 Japan

Don’t tip. Seriously — it can be considered rude or confusing. Excellent service is the cultural baseline expectation, not something deserving extra pay. In rare cases (private tour guides, ryokan staff), tips are placed in an envelope.

🇨🇳 China

Not customary. Western-style hotels and tourist restaurants in major cities increasingly accept tips, but locals don’t tip.

🇰🇷 South Korea, 🇹🇼 Taiwan, 🇸🇬 Singapore

Tipping not customary. A service charge (usually 10%) is often included on restaurant bills. No additional tip needed.

🇦🇺 Australia & 🇳🇿 New Zealand

Not expected, but appreciated. 10% for good service at restaurants is generous. Workers earn fair minimum wages.

🇮🇳 India & 🇵🇰 Pakistan

10% at sit-down restaurants is appreciated. Round up for taxis and rickshaws. Hotel staff (bellhops, housekeeping) appreciate small tips (₹50–100 / Rs 100–200).

🇦🇪 UAE & 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia

10–15% at restaurants if not already included as service charge. Hotel staff usually expect tips (AED 5–10 per service).

🇲🇽 Mexico, 🇧🇷 Brazil, 🇦🇷 Argentina

10% standard in most Latin American countries; 15–20% in tourist areas. Sometimes already included as “propina” or “servicio.”

🇿🇦 South Africa

10–15% at restaurants. Petrol station attendants and parking guards traditionally receive small tips (R5–10).

Tipping in Salons, Spas, and Beauty Services

  • Haircut: 15–20%
  • Hair coloring: 15–20% (on the full service price)
  • Manicure/pedicure: 15–20%
  • Massage: 15–20% on the pre-tax service amount
  • Facial: 15–20%
  • Eyebrow threading/waxing: 15–20% or $2–5 minimum

Etiquette tip: if multiple stylists worked on you (e.g., one washed, one cut, one colored), tip each one separately rather than only the lead stylist.

Hotel Tipping Made Simple

  • Bellhop / Porter: $1–2 per bag, $5 minimum for multiple bags or heavy bags
  • Housekeeping: $2–5 per night, left DAILY (not at end of stay — different staff may work different days). Put the cash in an envelope marked “Housekeeping — Thank You.”
  • Doorman: $1–2 for hailing a cab or helping with bags
  • Concierge: $5–20 depending on request complexity (restaurant booking = $5; impossible-to-get tickets = $20+)
  • Room service: Usually a gratuity is already included on the bill — check before adding more
  • Valet: $2–5 when your car is returned (not when dropping off)

 

Group of friends splitting a restaurant bill evenly

How to Split a Bill Fairly

Splitting bills creates more friction than it should. Here are three fair approaches:

1. Even Split (Easiest)

Total ÷ number of people. Best when everyone ordered similar items at similar prices. Our calculator does this automatically.

2. Item-by-Item

Each person pays for what they ordered, plus their share of tax and tip. Take a photo of the receipt. Best when prices vary significantly (one person had appetizers, another had only soup).

3. Adjusted Split

Even split, with the higher spenders chipping in extra. Often the most relationship-friendly approach for groups where one or two people ordered noticeably more.

The “Awkward Conversation” Rule

Discuss splitting before you order, not after the bill arrives. “Should we just split evenly?” at the start prevents math arguments at the end.

10 Common Tipping Questions Everyone Asks

In the US, tipping the owner is optional but increasingly common. Outside the US, it's usually not expected.

That's usually the tip — you don't need to add more. Check whether it's labeled "gratuity," "service charge," or "auto-tip" and whether it goes to the staff (most do).

Cash is preferred when possible — servers get it immediately and avoid card processing reductions in some setups. But card tips are still appreciated.

Yes — tip based on the ORIGINAL bill amount before the discount. The server provided full service regardless of your discount.

Not required. If they have a tip jar and you feel inclined (especially if they prepared a complex order), $1–2 is generous.

Optional. 10% or $2–5 is appropriate if someone packed your large order or made special accommodations.

Optional. $0.50–$1 per drink, or 10–15% on a tab, is common in the US.

Then you can't really afford the meal. Always budget for the tip — it's not optional in tipping cultures. If your budget is tight, choose a counter-service or fast-casual place where tipping is optional.

Yes — tip on what the meal WOULD have cost. The staff still served you.

There's no maximum. Generous tips for outstanding service or in low-tip situations (a $5 bill where 20% = $1) are always appropriate. Tipping 30–50% on a small bill is completely normal.

Final Thoughts

Tipping doesn’t have to be stressful. Memorize the standard percentages, use a calculator for the math when you want it, and adjust up or down based on service quality. When traveling internationally, do 30 seconds of research before your trip — and you’ll never tip awkwardly again.

👉 Ready to calculate your next tip? Try our free Tip Calculator now — instant, accurate, supports 25+ currencies, and splits bills automatically.

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