Toronto Star

If the coffee’s to go, do you pay a tip?

Panic can rise when digital payment systems prompt you for a gratuity

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

Were you prompted for a tip, maybe as much as 30 per cent, when paying with debit for your counter-service coffee? Consumers who pay with plastic are increasing­ly finding themselves in a quandary as digital payment devices nudge them to add a sometimes sizable tip. Digital payment systems now prompt customers for gratuities on all sorts of transactio­ns. But people shouldn’t feel guilty for opting to tap “no tip” when ordering food or a beverage to take away.

Lisa Orr, a Toronto-based etiquette expert, is unsure that the cultural practice around tipping has changed. Whereas it’s still standard to leave a gratuity after a sit-down meal, manicure or haircut, it’s not as common to leave 15 per cent or more for food or drinks to go. But technology seems to be attempting to change that by allowing any vendor to solicit gratuities — no matter how little service is required.

“I’m seeing it everywhere now and I think part of it is because it’s so easily built into our payment gateways,” she said, referring to the rise of tip prompts in coffee shops and other places where patrons usually take their orders to go.

Square Inc., which provides digital point-of-sale systems, was founded nearly10 years ago and allows any retailer with a smartphone or tablet to process credit card payments. The San Francisco-based company’s hardware and software is ubiquitous at small-scale operations including market booths, ice- cream shops and coffee spots, and allows proprietor­s to decide whether or not to prompt buyers for a tip.

Nearly 90 per cent of retailers that enable tipping rely on the company’s “smart tip amounts” feature, said spokespers­on Leslie Jackson in an email. When consumers spend less than $10, they can choose between no tip, $1, $2, or $3. When they spend more than that, they can choose between no tip, 15 per cent, 20 per cent or 25 per cent. When retailers choose to input custom options, the highest custom percentage a Canadian seller has set is 30 per cent, she said.

In 2018, Canadians tipped an average of 13.4 per cent using Square at food and drink sellers, according to the company’s data. That includes an average13.7 per cent at coffee and tea shops, 13.1 per cent at food trucks, 12.9 per cent at bakeries and 11.9 per cent at quick service restaurant­s.

The use of digital payment terminals encourages consumers to be more generous than they would be if they were using cash, Orr said. For a $2.75 cent coffee bill, for example, a patron may pay with $3 and leave behind the quarter in change as a tip. For the same bill paid digitally, a 15 per cent tip is more than 40 cents.

“If the cashless options were replicated … you might feel less sort of upset about it,” she said, referencin­g the guilt and shame some people feel upon seeing the auto prompts asking for tips.

But, in an increasing­ly cashless society, the autoprompt­s give patrons the option to leave a little something despite not having cash on hand, said Mark von Schellwitz, vice-president for Western Canada for Restaurant­s Canada, a not-for-profit associatio­n representi­ng more than 30,000 food-service industry businesses.

Consumers can choose to ignore the values put in by the owner and input their own choice, he said. People likely choose to leave less in tips at a quick-service restaurant than a full-service one with a profession­al wait staff, von Schellwitz added.

“Ultimately, it is the customer’s choice whether they tip or not,” he said.

It’s not necessary to leave a tip for over-the-counter service, said Orr, whose personal preference is not to do so. Still she recognizes there are some instances where people may choose to leave a gratuity.

One example is if a patron develops an ongoing relationsh­ip with a barista, who may know their complicate­d order by heart and welcome them by name, she said.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Whether you pay with cash or by card, leaving a tip — and how much — is your choice and should reflect the service you get.
DREAMSTIME Whether you pay with cash or by card, leaving a tip — and how much — is your choice and should reflect the service you get.

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