Entitled and cheap?
Millennials — also somewhat disparagingly called the Entitled Generation — tip the least, a new survey shows, but it may not be for the reasons you think.
THE STATS
A new survey from CreditCards.com paints millennials — America’s largest demographic — as the “worst tippers in the U.S.” According to the survey, a weighted study of 1,000 interviews, 10 per cent of millennials routinely stiff their servers at restaurants. Compare that figure with the percentage of gen-Xers and baby boomers who admitted stiffing the wait staff: 1.8 per cent and 4.4 per cent, respectively. The highest percentage of baby boomers (6.1 per cent) who stiffed servers was found in the 6472 age group, some of whom presumably live on fixed incomes and have to watch every cent.
CHEAP OPTIONS
Millennials are also more likely to select the lowest percentage when presented with tipping options at fast-casual restaurants or on an Uber app, according to the survey. Fourteen per cent of millennials will pick the cheapest tip option, compared to 9.3 per cent of gen-Xers and 4.8 per cent of boomers. On the surface, the survey would seem to offer more data that older Americans can use to feel superior to millennials, the generation they have derided as lazy, narcissistic and prone to communicating with their thumbs.
DELETE TIPPING?
More millennials than any other generation say they would prefer to eliminate tipping, a practice that has increasingly come under assault in America, including in Washington, where voters will decide Tuesday whether to gradually eliminate the tipped minimum wage. Nearly 27 per cent of millennials would prefer to dine in restaurants with higher prices and no tipping, compared to 25 per cent of gen-Xers and 13.5 per cent of boomers. “Older respondents tended to like tipping more, and its alternatives less, than did younger respondents,” wrote Michael Lynn, a professor at the Cornell University School of Hotel Administration who researches tipping. The observation was part of Lynn’s 2017 report, “Should U.S. Restaurants Abandon Tipping? A Review of the Issues and Evidence.” Lynn agreed that younger diners tend to prefer no-tipping models more than older generations. “So this may explain their lower liking of tipping,” Lynn wrote. “Perhaps they are more attentive to and affected by the recent social and media campaigns against tipping.”
FAST EATERS
Another factor to consider about the CreditCards.com survey: The respondents were simply asked about their tipping behaviours at a “restaurant,” without stipulating whether it was a full-service establishment or a fast-casual operation. Millennials tend to prefer dining experiences that are quick, customizable, communal and cheap, all the hallmarks of fast-casual dining. Tipping at such counterservice restaurants is not required, or at least not as much as at full-service restaurants where the wait staff often lives off tips.
LOW INCOME
Finally, millennials are still in their early wage-earning years, averaging about US$35,000 per year. As Lynn noted via email, at least one study has shown that “tipping increases with income.” In other words, once millennials make more money, they may be more willing to share the wealth with servers.