Tipping on your credit card

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by skeeter, Sep 8, 2007.

  1. skeeter

    skeeter Member

    This might be the wrong forum... but I thought it might be a good place to ask.

    How come tips that I leave on the receipt NEVER get charged? Are places not allowed to process credit card tips.. or what?
     
  2. gerber25

    gerber25 Member

    From what I remember from my serving days, the only time that we wouldn't enter the tips was when we lost the slip and so couldn't prove it.
     
  3. gmanfsu

    gmanfsu Well-Known Member

    Umm, your wait staff is super rich and only waits tables for fun?

    Even if the restaurant has a policy, they can't deny the charge. All they can do is charge the CC fees back to the wait staff...
     
  4. bizwiz41

    bizwiz41 Well-Known Member

    Are you sure your "NEVER" get charged? For example restaurants have the "tip" section on the slip, and now most have the "% calculation" done for you.

    What you generally see is that the "card is swiped, and the check amount is entered (i.e $25.00), then the "slip" is brought to your table for "tip amount and signing". So, if you go home and check your on-line statement, you will generally see an authoriztion for the dinner amount and $1. The tip is always charged when the transaction clears the institution.

    If you are NEVER being charged, then something is wrong; either you are not entering the tip on the "merchant copy", or you are not checking the charge after full processing (and are getting charged).
     
  5. greg1045

    greg1045 Well-Known Member

    Tips, if any, are added on to the cost of the meal after you receive the bill for the meal.
    Line # 1 on the bill is the cost of the meal
    Line # 2 on the bill is the amount of the tip that you have to complete. If the service was lousy, or left the tip in cash on your table, you leave line # 2 blank.
    Line # 3 - completed by you is the amount from line # 1.
    Cashier runs the information through the credit card terminal, prints out two sales slips. You sign one - which the cashier keeps, and hands you the second slip.
     

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