Tipping in France: what's normal in 2026.
Service is included in the price by French law. A tip is optional, modest, and almost always cash — a few coins on the saucer, not a percentage on the card terminal.
Service is compris — included. A 15% charge is already built into every menu price. Tipping is optional: round up to the next €5, or leave a few coins. Currency: euro (EUR, €). The cultural baseline: "Le pourboire is a thank-you, not a wage."
The one-screen rule: round the bill up, leave €1–2 at a café, €2–5 at a restaurant, €5–10 at a multi-course dinner — and absolutely not 18%.
Cultural context
French tipping is governed less by etiquette than by a law most visitors have never heard of. The loi du 22 décembre 1933 requires that service compris — service included, set at roughly 15% — be built into the displayed price of food and drink in cafés, brasseries, and restaurants. Servers therefore earn a full SMIC-based wage, not a tipped sub-minimum. The pourboire (literally "for a drink") is what remains: a true gratuity, freely given, traditionally a handful of euro coins left on the table. The France.fr tourism board's 2024 visitor guidance and Rick Steves' Europe both make the same point — tipping 18–20% is read as either ostentation or anxiety, not generosity. Round up, or leave 5% on a special meal.
By situation
| Service | Customary tip | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sit-down restaurant | Round up, or 5% | €2–5 on a typical bill, €10 on a tasting menu. |
| Café (espresso, drink) | €0.20–1 | Drop a coin on the saucer when you leave. |
| Bar | Round up | Leave the small change. Per-drink tipping isn't a thing. |
| Taxi | 5–10% | Round up to next euro. €1 for help with bags. |
| Hotel housekeeping | €1–2 / night | Mid-range and up. Optional at budget hotels. |
| Hotel porter | €1–2 / bag | €5 minimum at a four-star. |
| Tour guide (half day) | €5–10 | Per person, cash. |
| Hairdresser (coiffeur) | €2–5 | Flat amount, not a percentage. Optional. |
Money mechanics
France is heavily card-based — chip-and-PIN and contactless are universal — but the card terminal is the worst place to tip. Most French restaurant terminals don't show a tip step, and the server cannot adjust the amount after the chip is read. The functional workaround is to pay the bill on card, then leave a separate cash pourboire: a few euro coins on the table, in the bill folder, or directly into the server's hand. Hotels that add a "service" or "frais de service" line on the invoice have already covered the tip — you don't add more. At cafés, the historic move is to leave the coins from your change on the saucer; even €0.20 from a €2.40 espresso is acceptable. Never tip in dollars; ATMs are easy.
The phrase to use
Mistakes visitors make
- Tipping 18–20% American-style. Servers find it embarrassing, not generous — the math implies they were not already paid. 5% on a fine meal is the ceiling.
- Trying to write the tip on the credit-card slip. Most French terminals don't have the line, and the server can't add it after the chip is inserted. Pay the bill on card; leave coins separately.
- Tipping at every coffee. An espresso at a counter doesn't get tipped. If you sit at a table and the waiter brings it to you, drop the coins from your change on the saucer when leaving — not more.
FAQ
What does "service compris" mean on a French menu?
Service is included. Under the French law of 22 December 1933, a 15% service charge is built into the price of every item on a menu and into the final bill. Servers are paid a full wage on this basis. Anything you add is a true tip — "le pourboire" — and is genuinely optional.
Can I add a tip to my credit-card payment in France?
Often no. Many French card terminals don't have a tip line and won't let the server adjust the amount after the chip is inserted. The safest path is to pay the bill on card and leave a separate cash tip — a few euro coins on the table or in the bill folder.
The "service included" model holds across the western Mediterranean. See tipping in Italy (coperto is a cover charge, not a tip) and tipping in Spain (round up, leave the coins). The country hub has the full list.
For the closest cultural neighbor, tipping in Germany follows a similar logic with one local twist — you state the rounded total to the server when handing over the card rather than leaving cash on the table.