When you go to a restaurant, do typically tip?
As you can tell from the post title, depends on the country I'm in. In Belgium, all restaurant food is tax and service included, so most people either don't tip or tip ridiculously small amounts (like half a euro for a 60 euro bill or some such). Having some experience with American tipping, I find the tiny tips absurd and rather pointless, so I don't tip at all here.
Do you tip a set amount or do you vary based on service quality?
What with being used to a country without tipping and generally a much slower pace in restaurants, I tend to be quite impressed with the efforts American waiters will go to to serve people (although at times it can be over the top and become annoying), so I pretty much always aim for 20%. If the numbers work out that way and the service was good, it can be up to 25 or 30%. And there was one time that I was taking a small bus - really more like a big SUV - from one city to another, and ended up being the only passenger left. To the best of my knowledge tipping wasn't expected under those circumstances (tickets were bought beforehand), but since I had a good time talking to the driver and he went to some extra effort to make things easier for me, I gave him five bucks at arrival. I'm not really sure what he thought about that... but he took them, anyway.
But I don't usually go lower than 20% - of course, I haven't eaten in American restaurants all that often, and never really had a serious reason to be dissatisfied.
Why do you tip or choose not to?
Because it's the thing to do in America. Let me tell you, though, first time I went to a restaurant in America - or Canada, it was, actually - and had to pay the bill while my friends were already outside, and suddenly was informed by an angry waitress that tipping was the custom there, I panicked somewhat.

Pizza delivery, tip the driver?
Yeah - again, in America.
Why or why not?
Again, it's the thing to do?

To Tip or not to Tip?
26/02/2010 05:17:47 AM
- 1379 Views
Re: To Tip or not to Tip?
26/02/2010 06:39:12 AM
- 892 Views
Re: To Tip or not to Tip?
26/02/2010 11:35:22 PM
- 684 Views
Re: To Tip or not to Tip?
27/02/2010 12:05:35 AM
- 748 Views
Re: I tip unless the service has been very bad. (I'm mostly unemployed.)
26/02/2010 06:45:01 AM
- 811 Views
Re: I tip unless the service has been very bad. (I'm mostly unemployed.)
26/02/2010 06:53:43 AM
- 885 Views
I don't tip. It's a cultural thing, it's not common to tip here. *NM*
26/02/2010 07:05:47 AM
- 412 Views
It INFURIATES me that tips are reported and taxed
26/02/2010 07:15:43 AM
- 809 Views
No it is just another way of being compensated
26/02/2010 02:20:37 PM
- 677 Views
Businesses compensate employees
27/02/2010 07:08:12 AM
- 791 Views
I used to deliver pizzas....
26/02/2010 08:16:29 AM
- 791 Views
Sounds like an american problem to me.
26/02/2010 08:42:09 AM
- 668 Views
I'm 23, married, and have a baby
26/02/2010 11:43:26 PM
- 749 Views
i have a physics degree, and i delivered pizza to pay the bills when i was in school
27/02/2010 03:41:40 AM
- 684 Views
At least you don't have an English Degree
27/02/2010 03:43:27 AM
- 669 Views
my BS in physics is more worthless than your english degree
27/02/2010 04:03:51 AM
- 750 Views
A master's doesn't really help, either.
*NM*
27/02/2010 10:24:36 AM
- 344 Views

meh, it's more opportunity than the bachelor's would be
27/02/2010 10:27:40 AM
- 672 Views
Considerably
27/02/2010 01:59:55 PM
- 697 Views
Definitely tip.
26/02/2010 08:51:22 AM
- 890 Views
Re: Definitely tip.
26/02/2010 01:43:51 PM
- 659 Views
I tip as appropriate and within my means
26/02/2010 01:49:24 PM
- 783 Views
In America, I tip. In Belgium, I don't.
26/02/2010 03:29:41 PM
- 864 Views
Interestingly...
26/02/2010 04:44:09 PM
- 931 Views
Lol. Whenever my grandmother "wants to pay everything including the tip" that usually equates to...
27/02/2010 02:14:45 AM
- 688 Views