2026 Tipping & Gratuity Calculator: Split Bills to Tip Pools
The ultimate US gratuity suite. 5 tools in one: Quick Gratuity (pre-tax vs. post-tax & 20+ American service industry norms) · Split the Check by individual orders · Annual Tip Tracker · Restaurant & Business tools (IRS tip pooling, FICA tip credit, mandatory auto-grat) · Tipped Wage Worker IRS OBBBA tax deduction estimator.
Enter a bill amount to see your tip calculation.
Add people with their individual order amounts, then click Calculate.
Add your regular dining and service habits to see how much you spend on tips annually — and the cost difference if you tipped at a different rate.
Add your dining and service habits to see your annual tip spend.
Select a business tool and click Calculate to see results.
Enter your annual tip income and total earnings to see your OBBBA “No Tax on Tips” federal income tax savings.
How to Calculate Gratuity, Split Checks & Estimate Auto-Grat
5 specialized tools in one — here’s what each tab does and when to use it
The fastest way to calculate your tip with 2026 service-type norms for 20+ categories pre-loaded.
- Select your service type (restaurant, rideshare, hotel, salon…)
- Enter bill amount & your state for auto sales tax
- Choose a preset % or enter a custom amount
- Get instant tip, total, per-person split & 2026 benchmark rating
- Toggle pre-tax vs post-tax tipping for accurate results
Split an uneven group bill with individual order tracking — up to 8 people with different amounts.
- Add each person with their individual order total
- Enter shared items (apps, bottles, desserts) separately
- Auto-splits tax + tip proportionally per person
- Shows each person’s exact amount owed
- Share the breakdown via WhatsApp instantly
Discover how much you spend on tips per year and what you’d save at a different tipping rate.
- Add multiple service categories (dining, coffee, delivery…)
- Enter how often you use each service per week
- Set your average bill & tip % for each category
- Compare your annual cost vs. a lower tip percentage
- See the 5-year cumulative impact on your finances
Four tools for restaurant owners, salon operators & event planners with OBBBA-updated rules.
- Auto-Gratuity: Set party-size thresholds & mandatory rates
- Tip Pool: Distribute pooled tips fairly by role & hours
- FICA Tip Credit (§45B): Estimate your annual tax credit
- Event Planner: Budget gratuities for weddings & multi-vendor events
If you’re a tipped worker, estimate your federal income tax savings under the new “No Tax on Tips” law.
- Enter your annual tip income & total W-2 earnings
- Select filing status (single, MFJ, HOH) & occupation
- See your deduction amount (up to $25,000)
- Get your estimated federal tax savings for 2025–2028
- Check if your state mirrors the OBBBA deduction
2026 Etiquette: Standard Rates for Restaurants, Salons & Deliveryy
Updated norms based on Toast POS Q1 2025 (1.2B transactions), JIM 2025 Generosity Index & Bankrate 2025 Survey
| Service | Below Avg | Standard (2026) | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full-Service Restaurant | 15% | 18–20% | 25%+ | Tip on pre-tax subtotal. 20% is the new national baseline. |
| Buffet Restaurant | 5% | 10% | 15% | For beverage service & plate clearing only. |
| Fast Casual / Counter | 0% | 10–15% | 20% | Optional but appreciated. Tablet prompts can create pressure. |
| Coffee Shop | 0% | 10–15% | 20% | Customized orders or regulars often tip more. |
| Bar / Cocktail Lounge | $1/drink | 15–18% | 20%+ | Tab service: tip on total. Cash: $1–2 per drink minimum. |
| Food Delivery (DoorDash etc.) | 10% | 15% | 20% | Tip before ordering — it affects driver assignment. |
| Catering Staff (Event) | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | Separate from any included service charge on contract. |
2026 Restaurant Trend: 20% has overtaken 18% as the expected minimum at full-service restaurants, driven partly by tablet-prompted defaults. The national dining tip average reached 19.4% in Q1 2025 (Toast). Always check your bill — parties of 6+ often have 18–20% auto-gratuity already added.
| Service | Below Avg | Standard (2026) | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rideshare (Uber / Lyft) | 10% | 15–18% | 22%+ | In-app tip after ride. 5-star rides: always tip. Minimum $1 is common. |
| Taxi / Cab | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | Drivers depend on tips more than app drivers. Tip cash if possible. |
| Valet Parking | $3 | $4–5 | $8–10 | Tip when retrieving the car. Cash preferred. |
| Airport Shuttle / Car Service | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | Plus $1–2 per bag if driver helps load luggage. |
Rideshare Tip Tip: Only 16% of Uber/Lyft riders tip every ride (Bankrate 2025). Tipping on the app after drop-off is acceptable — you have up to 30 days. For exceptional service (e.g., helped with heavy bags, navigated major traffic), 25%+ is appropriate.
| Service | Below Avg | Standard (2026) | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hotel Housekeeping | $2/night | $4–5/night | $7–10/night | Tip daily in an envelope labeled “Housekeeping.” Staff rotate, so daily tips reach the right person. |
| Hotel Bellhop / Porter | $2/bag | $3/bag | $5/bag | Minimum $5 for the first bag in major cities (NYC, Miami, Vegas). |
| Hotel Concierge | $5 | $10–15 | $20–25 | For complex requests (sold-out restaurant reservations, tickets). Simple directions: no tip needed. |
| Hotel Room Service | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | Even if there’s a “service fee” on the bill, this often goes to the hotel — not the delivery staff. |
Hotel Tip Trap: A “service charge” or “resort fee” on a hotel bill does NOT replace the staff tip in most US hotels. These fees go to hotel management. Always tip housekeeping, bellhops, and room service separately in cash when possible.
| Service | Below Avg | Standard (2026) | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hair Salon / Stylist | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | If the owner cuts your hair, 20% still applies in 2026 — the old “don’t tip owners” rule is outdated. |
| Barber | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | Cash tips help barbers more due to OBBBA reporting thresholds. |
| Nail Salon / Manicure | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | OBBBA expanded FICA Tip Credit to nail salons — tip reporting matters for your technician. |
| Spa / Massage Therapist | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | If spa charges a mandatory service fee, ask if it goes to the therapist before adding more. |
| Tattoo Artist | 15% | 20% | 25–30% | Larger, more complex pieces warrant higher tips. Artists spend significant unpaid design time. |
| Makeup Artist / Esthetician | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | For bridal/event makeup, tip based on total service value, not just products used. |
OBBBA & Beauty Workers 2025: The One Big Beautiful Bill Act now covers salon workers (barbers, nail techs, estheticians, massage therapists) under the FICA Tip Credit expansion. These workers can also claim the “No Tax on Tips” deduction up to $25,000 on qualifying tip income for tax years 2025–2028.
| Service | Below Avg | Standard (2026) | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grocery Delivery (Instacart) | 10% | 15% | 20% | Minimum $3–5 for small orders. Tip before checkout — affects shopper assignment. |
| Grocery Shopping (In-Store) | 10% | 15% | 20% | For personal shoppers fulfilling your list. Same as delivery rates. |
| Pizza Delivery | $3 | $4–5 | $7+ | Bad weather, stairs, large orders or long distances warrant $7+. |
| Flower / Gift Delivery | $2 | $3–5 | $7+ | Often cash-only at door. Have it ready when buzzing in. |
Delivery App Reminder: “Service fees” charged by apps like DoorDash, Uber Eats or Instacart go to the platform — NOT the driver. The tip field is entirely separate and is the primary income for many delivery workers. A $0 tip on a $60 order during rush hour is widely considered unacceptable in 2026.
| Service | Below Avg | Standard (2026) | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Movers (per mover) | $20 | $25–40 | $50+ | Flat amount per mover. More for heavy furniture, stairs, or extreme heat. Provide water & snacks too. |
| Auto Repair / Service Tech | $10 | $15–20 | $25+ | Not always expected, but appreciated for jobs that go above & beyond. Cash preferred. |
| Pet Groomer | 15% | 18–20% | 25% | More for difficult pets or extensive services. Regular groomers appreciate consistent tips. |
| House Cleaner (Regular) | 10–15% | 15–20% | $20–50/visit | For regular cleaners, annual holiday bonus of one visit’s pay is standard. |
| Parking Garage Attendant | $1 | $2 | $3–5 | Self-park garages: no tip needed. Attended garages: tip at pickup. |
Moving Tip Advice: Don’t prepay all moving tips — hold back a portion until the job is complete. Reward the full team based on care of items, punctuality, and attitude. For a full-day move with 3–4 movers, $80–$160 total divided evenly is appropriate for good service.
Navigating “Tipflation” & Mandatory Service Charges
Key data from Toast POS, Bankrate, JIM Generosity Index & Pew Research — updated Q1 2025
National average tip rate at full-service restaurants in Q1 2025.
Average American spends on tips annually across all service categories.
Americans who say tip requests have increased in places they didn’t expect.
Average tip increase when customers are prompted by a tablet vs. no prompt.
Estimated tipped workers who qualify for the OBBBA No-Tax-on-Tips deduction.
Percentage of Uber/Lyft rides that receive no tip from passengers (2025 data).
5 Real-World Scenarios: From Coffee Kiosks to Wedding Vendors
Exact dollar breakdowns for 12 real American tipping scenarios across cities, service types & bill sizes
Saturday dinner at a mid-range Manhattan bistro. Entrées, one shared appetizer, two glasses of wine. NY state sales tax: 8.875%.
UberX from LAX to a Hollywood hotel, 14 miles, 35 min ride during moderate traffic. Driver helped with 2 suitcases.
Birthday celebration at a Chicago River North steakhouse. Party of 8 — restaurant applies mandatory 20% auto-gratuity. IL sales tax: 10.25%.
Full color treatment, cut, and blowout at a Brickell salon. FL has no income tax but OBBBA tip deduction still applies to federal taxes. FL sales tax: 7%.
3-night stay at a major Strip hotel with valet parking, bellhop service, daily housekeeping, and room service breakfast one morning. NV has no income tax.
BBQ order for a Friday night gathering — brisket, ribs, sides. DoorDash with a 3-mile delivery radius in East Austin. TX sales tax: 8.25%.
Daily stop at a Capitol Hill café — one oat milk latte with a custom flavor and one drip coffee. WA sales tax: 10.25%. Tablet prompts 18%, 20%, 25%.
Weekend wedding at a Nashville venue. Catering (120 guests), live band, photographer, hair & makeup for 4. TN sales tax: 9.75%.
Flat-rate yellow cab from Midtown Manhattan to JFK. NY flat rate: $70 + tolls + surcharges. NY taxis add a 2.5% “MTA surcharge” and $1 peak-hour fee.
Gel mani + standard pedicure at a Buckhead nail salon. GA sales tax: 8%. Services split between two technicians.
90-minute deep tissue massage at a Back Bay spa. MA sales tax on services: 6.25%. Spa added a 15% “facility fee” — does it replace the tip?
Client lunch at an Uptown steakhouse with 3 executives. Meal qualifies for 50% business deduction under IRS rules. TX sales tax: 8.25%. Business tax rate: 24%.
For Service Workers & Owners: OBBBA Tax Deductions & FICA Credits
Insider advice from hospitality professionals, tax CPAs, and personal finance experts — what most Americans don’t know
The fastest tip calculation method in the US: move the decimal one place left, then double it. Works every single time for the 20% standard.
- ✓$58.00 bill: move decimal → $5.80, double it → $11.60 tip
- ✓$143.00 bill: move decimal → $14.30, double it → $28.60 tip
- ✓For 15%: move decimal, double, subtract ¼ of that number
- ✓For 25%: move decimal, double, add half again (÷2)
If a manager comps a dish or a drink, your server still did the full work — they carried the food, refilled drinks, and gave the same service. Tipping only on the reduced bill shortchanges them for effort they already put in.
- ✓Tip on the original menu price, not the comped/reduced total
- ✓Happy hour drink prices don’t mean lower tips — same pour, same service
- ✓Restaurant week / prix-fixe menus: tip on full à-la-carte equivalent
From the server’s perspective, cash tips and card tips are treated differently — both legally and practically. Here’s what every consumer should know:
- ✓Card tips: Go through payroll — taxed, tracked, subject to employer FICA withholding
- ✓Cash tips: Workers must self-report; still taxable but easier to manage for OBBBA deduction tracking
- ✓Credit card processing fee: Some employers deduct 2–3% from card tip payouts to cover processing — cash avoids this
- ✓For OBBBA purposes: Both cash and card voluntary tips qualify — but only if reported to employer
With tip prompts now appearing at self-checkout kiosks, food trucks, airport kiosks, and even vending machines, 66% of Americans report feeling overwhelmed (Pew 2024). A pre-decided personal policy eliminates the awkward hesitation every time.
- ✓Full table service: Always 20% — non-negotiable floor. Adjust up for great service.
- ✓Counter/counter service: 0–10% based on complexity of order and personal choice
- ✓Delivery apps: Always 15% minimum — pre-order, every time
- ✓Self-checkout kiosk with tip prompt: Your policy, no guilt. $0 is acceptable.
- ✓Annual tip budget: Use the Annual Tracker (Tab 3) to set a conscious spending ceiling
The OBBBA “No Tax on Tips” deduction is temporary (2025–2028 only) and requires proper setup. Most tipped workers are leaving money on the table by not tracking correctly from Day 1 of 2025.
- ✓Step 1 — Report every tip daily: Use IRS Form 4070 or your employer’s tip-reporting system. Unreported tips can’t be deducted.
- ✓Step 2 — Verify your W-2 Box 12: At year-end, confirm tips appear as Code TP. Alert payroll if missing.
- ✓Step 3 — Track auto-grat separately: Mandatory service charges do NOT qualify — keep them off your tip log.
- ✓Step 4 — Check the $150K income cap: The deduction phases out above $150K ($300K MFJ). Know your limit.
- ✓Step 5 — Use our OBBBA calculator (Tab 5): Estimate your exact deduction and federal savings before filing.
Bill errors and double-tip situations are more common than most diners realize — especially at large-party dinners. A 30-second check before signing protects both your wallet and your server.
- ✓Check for auto-grat first: Look for “Gratuity,” “Service Charge,” or “Mandatory Tip” before writing a tip on the line
- ✓Verify the subtotal: Tip on the food/drink line — not on tax, not on delivery fees
- ✓Screenshot or photo the receipt: Before signing, photograph it. Card tip disputes are easier with proof.
- ✓Check your bank statement within 48 hours: Tip-edit fraud (servers altering signed tip amounts) still occurs — catch it fast
- ✓Draw a line through blank tip fields: On paper receipts, always line through unused tip/total lines so they can’t be filled in later
Everything a savvy American tipper needs to know — from service minimums to tax strategy — distilled into one quick-reference guide.
Restaurant Floor
20% on pre-tax subtotal. 25%+ for exceptional. 15% signals disappointment. Always check for auto-grat first.
Rides & Taxis
Rideshare: 15–18%. Yellow cab: 20%. Airport pickup with bags: 18–20%. Tip in-app within 15 min.
Hotels
Housekeeping $4–5/night daily. Bellhop $3/bag. Room service 20% even with service fee. Valet $5 at pickup.
Beauty Services
Salon/barber/nail/spa: 18–20%. Tattoo artist: 20–25%. Split tip in cash if multiple techs work on you.
Delivery
Always 15% minimum pre-order — service fees go to the app, not driver. Min $3–5 even for small orders.
OBBBA Workers
Report every tip. Deduct up to $25K of tip income federally. Only voluntary tips qualify. Expires 2028.
Business Owners
Claim FICA Tip Credit (§45B). Now expanded to beauty businesses under OBBBA. File Form 8846 with return.
Quick Math
20%: move decimal, double. 15%: move decimal, add half. 25%: move decimal, double, add half.
FAQs: Pre-Tax vs. Post-Tax Tipping, Tip Jars, & Etiquette
Answers to the most common tipping questions for 2026 — including OBBBA rules
In 2026, 20% has become the new baseline expectation at full-service restaurants, up from 15% a decade ago. The national average reached 19.4% in Q1 2025 according to Toast POS data (1.2 billion transactions).
- Below 15%: Signals dissatisfaction — only appropriate for genuinely poor service
- 15–17%: Acceptable but below current standard
- 18–20%: The 2026 baseline. 20% is easy to calculate (move the decimal, double it)
- 22–25%: Generous — appropriate for excellent, attentive service
- 25%+: Exceptional — for servers who went truly above and beyond
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed in July 2025, created a federal income tax deduction of up to $25,000 on qualified tip income for eligible tipped workers, effective for tax years 2025 through 2028.
- Who qualifies: Tipped workers in 68 eligible occupations (servers, bartenders, hotel staff, barbers, nail techs, massage therapists, and more)
- Income limit: Must earn under $150,000 annually ($300,000 for married filing jointly)
- What counts: Only voluntary customer tips — mandatory auto-gratuity (service charges) does NOT qualify
- How it works: The first $25,000 of qualifying tip income is deducted from your federal taxable income — not a credit, a deduction
Etiquette experts and financial advisors overwhelmingly recommend tipping on the pre-tax subtotal. Here’s why: the sales tax is money going directly to the state government — it never reaches your server. Tipping on the post-tax total means you’re paying a percentage on money that is completely irrelevant to the service you received.
On a $100 pre-tax bill in a city with 9% sales tax:
- 20% pre-tax tip = $20.00
- 20% post-tax tip = $21.80
- Difference = $1.80 per bill
- Annual impact (2 restaurant visits/week) = $187/year more
The FICA Tip Credit (IRC §45B) allows restaurant owners and employers of tipped workers to claim a federal tax credit for the employer’s 7.65% FICA share paid on employee tips exceeding the federal minimum wage equivalent.
The OBBBA (2025) expanded this credit to cover beauty service businesses — barbershops, nail salons, spas, tattoo parlors, and similar establishments.
- For a restaurant with $30,000/month in employee tips above the minimum wage floor: ~$2,295/month in FICA tax credits
- Annual benefit for a mid-size restaurant: $15,000–$40,000 in federal tax credits
- This is a dollar-for-dollar tax credit, not a deduction — it directly reduces your tax liability
No — you don’t need to add an additional tip if auto-gratuity is already included. Auto-gratuity (also called a mandatory service charge or automatic gratuity) is typically 18–20% and is applied automatically for larger parties, usually 6 or more guests.
Important things to know:
- Auto-gratuity is NOT a voluntary tip for OBBBA purposes — it doesn’t count toward a worker’s $25,000 deduction limit
- The restaurant controls how auto-gratuity is distributed — it may not go entirely to your server
- If you received exceptional service, a small additional voluntary tip (5–10%) on top is always appreciated
- Always check your bill before signing — some restaurants charge both an auto-gratuity AND leave a tip line that could lead to double-tipping
This is genuinely a gray area in 2026. The proliferation of tablet-prompted tip requests at counter service and coffee shops has created what researchers call “tipping fatigue.” Here’s a practical guide:
- Simple drip coffee / grab-and-go: No tip required. A dollar or 10% is appreciated but not expected
- Customized or complex orders (multiple shots, specific milks, foam art): 15–20% is fair — the barista is doing skilled work
- If you’re a regular: Consistent small tips build goodwill and often lead to better drinks or remembered orders
- Tablet prompt: You can press “No Tip” without shame. The social pressure is manufactured by the point-of-sale software, not a cultural norm
The cleanest approach: each person pays for what they ordered, plus a proportional share of any shared items, tax, and tip. This is fairer than splitting evenly when people ordered very different amounts.
- Use the Group Bill Splitter tab in this calculator — enter each person’s food total, any shared items (appetizers, bottles), and it handles the rest
- For parties of 6+: check if auto-gratuity has already been added before adding another tip
- The “venmo me later” approach: one person pays, shares the breakdown via WhatsApp (our calculator does this), others transfer
- Splitting evenly is fine if everyone ordered similar amounts — it’s simpler and avoids awkwardness
Wedding and event gratuities require planning ahead because the amounts can be significant — easily $500–$2,000+ across all vendors. Key 2026 guidelines:
- Catering Staff / Banquet Servers: 18–20% of the food & beverage total, even if a service fee is included in the contract (always ask if it goes to staff)
- Officiant: $50–$100 if they’re a professional. For clergy, a $75–$150 donation to their institution is appropriate
- DJ / Band: 10–15% of their fee, or $25–50 per band member
- Photographer / Videographer: Not required, but $100–$250 for an 8-hour day is a meaningful gesture
- Hair & Makeup Team: 20% of service cost per person
- Florist, Cake Baker: Generally not tipped unless they do setup at the venue
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Methodology & Editorial Standards: YMYL Compliance & Data Privacy
Research-Based Content
All tipping benchmarks, norms, and statistics are sourced from published industry surveys (Toast, JIM Index, Bankrate, Pew Research) — not editorial opinion.
Government Source Priority
Tax calculations (OBBBA deduction, FICA Tip Credit, IRC §45B) are derived exclusively from IRS publications, DOL regulations, and enacted legislation — not third-party interpretations.
Reviewed & Updated Regularly
Calculator logic and tipping benchmarks are reviewed quarterly. Tax rates, OBBBA rules, and IRS thresholds are updated within 30 days of regulatory changes.
No Advertiser Influence
This tool receives no compensation from restaurants, delivery platforms, hospitality brands, or financial services companies. Recommendations are independent.
No Data Collection
All calculations run locally in your browser. No bill amounts, tip values, income figures, or personal data are transmitted to or stored by USFinanceCalculators.com.
Tax Year Scope
OBBBA deduction figures reflect the enacted law as applied to tax years 2025–2028. IRS marginal rates use the 2025 inflation-adjusted brackets published October 2024.
Authoritative federal sources this calculator’s tax and labor law guidance is based on
Educational purpose only. USFinanceCalculators.com provides this Tipping Calculator as a free educational resource. All results — including tip amounts, tax deduction estimates, FICA Tip Credit calculations, OBBBA deduction figures, and annual tipping budgets — are estimates for informational purposes only and do not constitute legal, tax, accounting, or financial advice.
No professional relationship. Use of this calculator does not create an attorney-client, CPA-client, or financial advisor relationship between the user and USFinanceCalculators.com. For advice specific to your tax situation — including OBBBA deduction eligibility, FICA Tip Credit claims, or employer tip-reporting obligations — consult a licensed CPA, tax attorney, or enrolled agent.
Tax law accuracy. OBBBA (“No Tax on Tips”) deduction information is based on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act as enacted (2025) and IRS proposed regulations issued September 2025. Tax brackets use IRS inflation-adjusted 2025 figures. Laws may change; always verify with the IRS.gov before filing. The OBBBA deduction is currently authorized for tax years 2025–2028 only.
Tipping norms are not legal minimums. Tipping percentages and benchmarks cited in this tool reflect current industry surveys and cultural norms — they are not legally required minimums (except where service charges are contractually mandated). Tipping customs vary by region, establishment type, service quality, and personal discretion.
State law variation. Minimum wage, tip credit, and tip pool rules vary significantly by state. This calculator uses federal standards as a baseline. Consult DOL.gov or your state labor board for state-specific tipped employee rights and employer obligations.
Last reviewed: April 2026 | Next scheduled review: July 2026 | Questions or corrections: editorial@usfinancecalculators.com