I have picked up at Sam's, Walmart and Kohl's. I never offered a tip because the order was relatively small.How about tipping at the drive ups at Walmart and other online ordered goods from local stores?
One of the local car repair shops near me had the original owner retire, while two employees took it over. In the past they didn't charge a cc fee. I went in to pay for brake work which they did a good job but. "Oh yeah we charge 3% for credit card payments ". I don't think I'll be back, the newer mechanics they have don't seem as skilled. You have to disclose stuff like thatWe were at a contractor's office (allegedly one of the best in the area). Got the invoice for the work which was a few thousand dollars. When we went for the credit card was told there was a 3% fee for cards. We went back home and delivered a check instead to save the fee. They did do outstanding work when all was said and done.
This was at Farm and Fleet and I saw the people in front of me tipping the guy carry out the order. I find the people they use for this job as bottom of the barrel as far as competency. The mail man I had for years refused gifts and tips. That's not the USPS policy though.I have picked up at Sam's, Walmart and Kohl's. I never offered a tip because the order was relatively small.
I tried to tip a Walmart auto tech because he helped me remove and replace a wiper blade purchased at another Walmart store, and he said Walmart company policy was to refuse tips. He was happy to help out in the rain, using tools and techniques that I didn't have with me. Based on that experience, I don't offer a tip, nor do I need help very often.
Place I used to work started holding our feet to the fire on eating while traveling. When I first started, in 2003, there was no limit. They didn't even mind you getting a couple of drinks. Wanted to go see a movie on a Wednesday when you were 2k miles from home? No problem. Go see a movie, spend $80 a day on food (and that was HARD in 2004/5) - no problem. By 2019, it was $40 per day. They figured an $8 breakfast, a $12 lunch, and a $20 dinner was more than enough - and that was exactly how HR broke the new policy down. Tips be darned I guess..... You wanted entertainment, well, don't you have a phone or a book you can take? Last time I traveled, I straight up told my manager that I was done traveling. I wasn't going to work 12 hours a day in some struggling division killing myself to eat a salad at a Zaxby's and off the Wendy's $5 menu.Co-worker asked a question about tipping and I think it's very interesting.... Go to Waffle House and in my experience, the service is usually very good. Fast, keeps your drinks filled, friendly, etc. A breakfast and coffee will probably run $15. A 20% tip is $3. Now go to a "fancy" restaurant that costs you $75 for a dinner and drink (even just a soda). A 20% tip there will be $15. The waiter or waitress deserves 5x the amount in a tip ?
That price seems really high. I do know they get you on drinks - a coffee is almost $4, as I recall. So that $8.95 "All American breakfast" (same as you describe, minus the waffle), gets you close to the $15 that I mentioned.But back on topic - I will admit the last time I had Waffle House, there were no hidden fees. It cost $20, which is just hogswash for 2 eggs, toast, hashbrowns, a couple of strips of bacon, and a waffle and some unsweet tea, but no hidden fees.
Was the Mexican sit down Del Taco? That's the only place other than Taco Johns that has 99 cent taco Wednesdays.Last Wednesday my wife and I went out for all three of our miles.
We each had a free drink at Panera (90 day free tea program) and they offered a bagel for a buck. That was breakfast.
For lunch, we split a Bean and Cheese Burrito and a Grilled Chicken Taco which was free if you bought something. They even comped us an iced tea. That was $2.
For dinner we went to a Mexican sit-down restauruant. They advertise a 99 cent taco special on Wednesdays. We each had three tacos which was plenty. Total cost with tip was $8.
Yes, it was cheap. But here's the thing. We almost never eat out. For $11 we would have still enjoyed better food at home. Apples, bananas, organic carrots are our snacking staples and my wife is a wizard with gourmet food on the dirt cheap. I used to travel all over the USA and you had to really make an effort to get away from all the salty, cheesy, sugary foods.
The best place to go out to eat these days... is a supermarket.
Actually it's a restaurant out here in Georgia called Los magallas. The tacos were surprisingly good even though honestly I think the chicken tacos were as cheap as cheap could be but still tasty.Was the Mexican sit down Del Taco? That's the only place other than Taco Johns that has 99 cent taco Wednesdays.
Some places have the kids eat free thing, but the age cutoff has gone from 6 down to 2 over the last couple decades.How about when a kid eats at a buffet…they have some questionable height requirements. Meaning if a kid is this tall (maybe 9 or 10 yo is typical) they are charged as an adult. Pretty bad as a 9-10 yo doesn’t t eat like an adult. 14-16? Yes, maybe even more.
11.85 here for what I want, 10.95 without the waffle. I wants the waffle. After tax and God forbid I splurge on onions and a slice of cheese in the hash browns - it's way closer to $20That price seems really high. I do know they get you on drinks - a coffee is almost $4, as I recall. So that $8.95 "All American breakfast" (same as you describe, minus the waffle), gets you close to the $15 that I mentioned.