TipCalc
Free · No sign-up · Works offline

The tip calculator that actually respects your time.

Type the bill. Drag the tip. Done. Split it between any number of people, round up to a clean number, and copy the result to send to whoever owes you. No popups, no ads in the middle of the calculator, no tracking your dinner.

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How to calculate a tip in your head

The fastest mental shortcut in the US is the "move and double" trick. Take the bill, move the decimal one place to the left (that's 10%), then double it for 20%.

Example: a $54.80 check. Ten percent is $5.48. Double it — about $11. Add it to the bill and you're at roughly $66 total. For 15%, take that 10% number and add half of it again. For 18%, take 20% and shave a little off.

This calculator does the same arithmetic, but it also handles the awkward part: the split. Three people, uneven orders, one person ordered drinks — that's where mental math falls apart and a calculator earns its keep.

Tip on pre-tax or post-tax?

Old-school etiquette says tip on the pre-tax subtotal. In practice, the post-tax number is the one printed at the bottom of the bill, and most people just tip on that. Both are accepted.

The math difference is small. On a $50 meal with 8% sales tax, tipping 20% on pre-tax gives the server $10. Tipping 20% on the post-tax $54 total gives them $10.80 — eighty cents. Nobody at the table will judge you either way.

If you want to be precise, enter the pre-tax subtotal above. If you'd rather just tip on the bottom-line number, enter that. The calculator doesn't care which one you use.

How much should you tip? A quick reference.

These are US norms in 2026. Tipping culture varies wildly by country — see the country guide for anywhere outside North America. Numbers below are the customary range, not a moral judgment.

ServiceCustomary rangeNotes
Sit-down restaurant18–22%15% is the floor for adequate service.
Bartender$1–$2 per drink, or 20%Whichever is higher on a tab.
Coffee shop / counter$1, or 10–15%Optional. Tip jar, not required.
Food delivery15–20%, $5 minimumThe delivery fee doesn't go to the driver.
Taxi / rideshare10–20%Round up the fare at minimum.
Hair salon / barber15–20%To the stylist directly when possible.
Hotel housekeeping$2–$5 / nightDaily, not just at checkout. Leave with a note.
Hotel bellhop$2 / bag, $5 minimumPer service, not per stay.
Movers$20–$40 / moverHigher for stairs or a long day.
Takeout (curbside / pickup)0–10%Optional. Tip if someone packed a complex order.

Sources: industry surveys (Pew Research, Bankrate annual tipping reports) and major US etiquette guides. Update annually.

By country

Tipping in Tokyo can be rude. Tipping in Paris is built into the bill. In Cairo, baksheesh is its own category. The norms below link to deeper guides:

See all 40+ countries →

The math, in case you're curious

The calculator runs three operations:

1. Tip amount = bill × (tip% ÷ 100)

2. Total = bill + tip. If "round up" is checked, total is rounded up to the next whole unit and tip is recomputed as total − bill.

3. Per-person split = total ÷ people, rounded to two decimals. Any remainder from rounding is added to the last person's share so the parts add back up to the total exactly. No silent rounding errors.

Your numbers never leave your browser. There's no server, no analytics on the inputs, no cookie that remembers your last dinner.

Frequently asked questions

How much should I tip at a restaurant in the US?

18% to 20% of the pre-tax total is the standard tip for sit-down service in 2026. 15% is the floor for adequate service. 25% or more rewards exceptional service, a difficult party, or a server who handled a complicated split with a smile.

Do you tip on the pre-tax or post-tax total?

Etiquette guides recommend tipping on the pre-tax subtotal. In practice, many people tip on the post-tax total because it's the number printed on the bill. Both are accepted — the difference on a typical meal is under a dollar.

How do I split a bill unevenly between people?

Switch to Split by share at the top of the calculator. Assign each person a number of shares — 1 for a single meal, 2 if they ordered for two, 0.5 if someone only had a coffee. The calculator divides the total and tip in proportion to the shares.

Should I tip on delivery?

Yes — 15% to 20% of the order subtotal, with a $5 minimum, is standard for food delivery in the US. The "delivery fee" you pay to the platform almost never reaches the driver. The driver sees your tip before accepting the order on most platforms, which means a low tip can mean a long wait.

What if the bill already has an auto-gratuity added?

Most restaurants add 18–20% automatically for parties of six or more. You can leave more if the service was exceptional, but you don't have to add anything on top. Read the bill carefully — the line is usually labeled "Service charge" or "Gratuity" and sits above the tax.

Is this calculator free? Are you tracking my data?

Yes, it's free. No sign-up, no email. The calculator runs entirely in your browser — your bill amount, tip, and split never get sent to a server, because there is no server doing the math. Privacy policy is one page and says exactly that.

Does it work offline?

Yes. Once the page has loaded once, the calculator works without an internet connection. Add it to your home screen on iOS or Android (Share → Add to Home Screen) and it behaves like an app.

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