Tipping in the United States: what's normal in 2026.
The US is the highest-tipping country in the world for most service interactions. Tips are not optional in the way they are in Europe — they are how tipped workers are paid.
Tipping is expected at almost every service interaction. Sit-down restaurants: 18–22% of the pre-tax bill, with 15% the floor. Currency: US dollar (USD, $). The cultural baseline: "If a person served you, you tip them."
The one-screen rule for the rest of this page: $1–$2 per drink at a bar, $3–$5 per night for hotel housekeeping, 15–20% for everything else with a human attached.
Cultural context
US tipping looks high to the rest of the world because the underlying wage structure is unusual. The federal Fair Labor Standards Act allows a "tipped minimum wage" as low as $2.13 per hour; tips are expected to bring total compensation up to the standard minimum wage. Twenty-three states still follow that federal floor in 2026. In those states, the customer is not tipping a bonus — they are paying the second half of the wage. California, Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Minnesota, Montana, Alaska, and a handful of others require employers to pay full minimum wage before tips, but the customary tipping percentages haven't dropped to match. Once the norm was 20%, it stuck.
The cultural moment around this is loud — see the tipping-fatigue piece for what the data shows — but the customary amounts for traditional service (restaurants, bars, taxis, hotels) have not changed.
By situation
| Service | Customary tip | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sit-down restaurant | 18–22% | Pre-tax. 15% floor. See restaurant page. |
| Counter / coffee shop | $1, or 10–15% | Optional. Tip on custom drinks, skip on drip coffee. |
| Bar (per drink) | $1–$2 | $1 beer, $2 cocktail. Round up on a closed tab to 20%. |
| Taxi / rideshare | 15–20% | Tip in-app for Uber/Lyft. Round up for cash taxis. More → |
| Food delivery | 15–20%, $5 min | Driver sees tip before accepting. More → |
| Hotel housekeeping | $3–$5 / night | Daily, with a note marked "for housekeeping." |
| Hotel bellhop | $2 / bag, $5 min | Per service, not per stay. |
| Hotel valet | $3–$5 | Each time the car is brought up. |
| Hotel concierge | $5–$20 | For a real service — booking, tickets — not for directions. |
| Hair salon / barber | 18–20% | Tip stylist directly when possible. More → |
| Tour guide (half day) | $10–$20 | Per person, in cash. |
| Movers | $20–$40 / mover | Plus lunch on a full day. |
Money mechanics
The US is a credit-card country, and the card terminal almost always has a tip field. At sit-down restaurants, the server brings a paper bill, you write the tip amount and total on the line, sign, and leave. At fast-casual and coffee counters, the iPad flips around and presents preset percentages (15%, 18%, 20%, or 18%, 22%, 25%). The presets are merchant choices, not etiquette — see tipping fatigue for what's actually expected.
Cash tips are welcome and slightly preferred by servers (faster, no card-processor fee, shared per the house tip-out at end of shift), but card tips also reach the worker — federal law since 2018 forbids employers from keeping any portion. For hotel housekeeping, leave cash on the pillow or desk with a small note that says "for housekeeping" — otherwise it can look like change you left behind.
The phrase to use
Mistakes visitors make
- Tipping 10% at a US restaurant. 10% reads as a complaint, not as polite. The floor is 15%, the modern default is 20%.
- Assuming the "service charge" is a tip you can ignore. Sometimes it goes to the server, sometimes to the house. If the bill shows a service charge, ask the server who gets it — and add a tip on top if they say "the house."
- Stiffing the housekeeper. The one tip most visitors forget. Leave $3–$5 cash per night, not as a lump sum at the end — different staff clean your room different days.
FAQ
Why is tipping so high in the United States?
Federal law allows a "tipped minimum wage" as low as $2.13/hour, with tips making up the rest of a standard minimum wage. In states that follow the federal floor, tips are not extra — they are the wage. The customary 15–20%+ exists because the underlying pay structure assumes it.
Is the 25% touchscreen prompt the new normal?
No. The 25% preset on touchscreens at counters and bakeries is set by the merchant, not by etiquette. Pew Research found only 25% of US adults always or often tip at counter service in 2023. The customary number at a coffee counter is still $1 or 10–15%, not 25%.
Heading north or south? The closest neighbors have very different rules — see tipping in Canada (15–20%, prompted on the terminal) and tipping in Mexico (10–15%, cash on the table). For the broader picture, the country hub has 22 destinations.
If you live here and want to drill into a specific service, the restaurant, delivery, and hotel pages have worked examples for the most-asked situations.