Tipping in Mexico: what's normal in 2026.
Mexican tipping is a layered system. There is a tip for the restaurant server, a tip for the bellhop, a tip for the man pumping the gas, and a tip for the kid bagging your groceries. None are huge; together they're a meaningful piece of household income.
Tipping is expected at sit-down restaurants and most service interactions. Sit-down restaurants: 10–15%, called propina. Currency: Mexican peso (MXN, $). Cash in pesos on the table is best. Bellhops: $20–50 MXN per bag.
The one-screen rule for the rest of this page: $50 MXN per night for housekeeping, $10–20 MXN for the gas station attendant, $5–10 MXN for the grocery bag-packer, and 15% propina at the table.
Cultural context
Many Mexican service workers depend on tips. The general minimum wage in 2026 is roughly $278.80 MXN per day (about $14 USD); in the tourist border zone it's higher, but still leaves restaurant, hotel, and gas-station staff relying on propina to bring earnings into liveable territory. The Visit Mexico (Sectur) 2024 traveller guidance and CONDUSEF's consumer protection notes describe tipping as customary at 10–15% for restaurants and recommend cash in pesos. Tipping is also expected at hotels ($50 MXN per night for housekeeping), at gas stations ($10–20 MXN to the attendant who pumps and cleans the windshield), and at supermarkets — where the cerillito packing your groceries works for tips alone.
By situation
| Service | Customary tip | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sit-down restaurant | 10–15% | Cash in pesos on the table. 15% in tourist zones. |
| Café | $10–$20 MXN | Coins on the saucer or in the jar. |
| Bar (per drink) | $10–$20 MXN | Round up; 10% on a closed tab. |
| Taxi | Round up | $83 MXN fare → $100. App rides: optional. |
| Hotel housekeeping | $50 MXN / night | Daily, on the pillow with a note. |
| Hotel porter / bellhop | $20–$50 MXN / bag | Cash on arrival; $50 at resorts. |
| Tour guide (half day) | $200–$400 MXN | Per person; double for private guides. |
| Hairdresser | 10–15% | Hand directly to the stylist. |
| Gas station attendant | $10–$20 MXN | For pumping + windshield. No self-serve. |
| Grocery bag-packer (cerillito) | $5–$10 MXN | Coin in the hand at the end of bagging. |
Money mechanics
Mexico is increasingly card-friendly in major cities and resorts — contactless works at most restaurants and hotels — but tipping is still overwhelmingly cash. The card terminal at sit-down restaurants often includes a propina prompt with preset percentages (10%, 15%, 20%); the addition does reach the server, though many locals still prefer cash on the table so it doesn't get reported through the payroll system at a lower share. Carry $20 and $50 MXN notes; the $200 MXN note is too large for tipping at gas stations and grocery stores. If a service charge (servicio) is printed on an upmarket bill, it's the house's; leave a small additional propina for the server. ATMs are widespread but charge cross-border fees — withdraw enough at once to cover several days of tipping.
The phrase to use
Mistakes visitors make
- Tipping in USD only. Even in Cabo or Cancún, cash in pesos is preferred — the worker doesn't have to exchange it, and a $5 USD tip can shed $5–10 MXN in friction by the time it reaches their pocket. Hit an ATM on arrival.
- Skipping the gas station attendant. All Mexican gas stations are full-service — someone pumps your gas, cleans your windshield, and watches your car. $10–20 MXN is expected, especially if they washed the windows or checked the tires.
- Walking past the grocery bag-packer. The cerillito at the checkout — often an elderly person or a teenager — earns nothing but tips. $5–10 MXN per shop, hand to hand, is standard.
FAQ
Do I tip in pesos or US dollars in Mexico?
Pesos. USD is accepted in resort areas, but the worker has to exchange it (with a fee) or hold it. A tip in pesos is liquid wage; the same amount in dollars loses 3–10% in conversion friction.
What's the difference between "servicio" and "propina" on a Mexican bill?
Servicio is a service charge — sometimes added at upmarket restaurants — that goes to the house. Propina is the actual tip, left in cash, going to the server. If servicio is printed, leave a small additional propina on top.
Coming from the north or heading south? Two close neighbors with very different rules: tipping in the United States (18–22%, tipping is the wage) and tipping in Brazil (10% serviço usually added to the bill). For the broader picture, the country hub has 22 destinations.
If you're continuing through Latin America, tipping in Argentina sits between Mexican and Brazilian norms — 10% in cash at the table, cubierto as a separate cover charge, and an unusual openness to being tipped in US dollars. The region shares the layered, cash-first habit, but the specific lines on the bill change country by country.