When airport porters help you check your bags curbside, you should tip $2 for the first bag and $1 for each additional bag; over-sized bags should be tipped at a rate of $2 per bag.
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Senning recommends tipping bellhops $1 to $2 per bag, like baggage handlers. He suggests similar amounts for staff who deliver items upon request, like extra towels. For housekeepers, he suggests leaving $1 to $2 per guest, per day that housekeeping is provided, which may not be daily.
When in doubt, especially if you've experienced service that goes above and beyond, it never hurts to offer a tip to the person helping. In most cases, if it's an airline employee, he or she will decline taking your money. For airport employees, tips ($5 is customary) are appreciated.
A reasonable minimum is $5, especially if you only have one attendant. In some cases, several different attendants help you to your gate. If your agent switches, you might not have time to tip the first one. However, a minimum of $5 is a great place to start, with more if the attendant goes above and beyond.
At best, tipping is optional in an airport lounge, but it's usually appreciated nonetheless. In the United States, for example, tipping most members of a wait staff and professionals who provide a service is customary. Despite this convention, tipping in a U.S. airport lounge is not required.
When airport porters help you check your bags curbside, you should tip $2 for the first bag and $1 for each additional bag; over-sized bags should be tipped at a rate of $2 per bag. No tip is required if you wheel your own bags to the check-in counter.
It's part of the service, and some have no-tipping policies. At most clubs -- and especially resorts and high-end daily fees -- you need to be ready with some small bills. But just how many small bills? To be safe, $3 to $5 per bag should do the trick.
Tip $1 per bag when you retrieve your luggage. You do not need to tip when you drop off your bags for storage. Tip from $5 to $10 depending on how involved the request, or a lump sum upon departure. Consider tipping higher if the concierge has gone above and beyond to procure something special.
There's no standard for tipping your airport parking shuttle driver. However, it's always kind to offer something to shuttle drivers. They work long hours driving frustrated travelers back and forth from parking to terminals. Rain or shine, heat or cold, they help people get where they need to be.
While flight attendants spend most of the flight providing service to customers, unlike other people in service industries, they shouldn't be tipped. There's no expectation to tip flight attendants, and for that matter some airlines have policies against tipping flight attendants.
Typically, you tip a bellman at the room, unless you're not going to your room immediately and you want your bags to be waiting for you when you get there; then you tip when a bellman first handles your bags.
Just as in Japan, it is not customary to tip in China. Tipping in China is generally uncommon and can even be considered rude or embarrassing in some circumstances so when taking a taxi, enjoying a refreshing drink or tucking into a delicious meal there's no requirement to leave any gratuities.
Of all the world's most popular tourist destinations, Japan is most notoriously the one where you should make a point not to tip. Why? Well, the gesture could be considered rude. The Japanese philosophy is that the staff works for an establishment as a team, and if they do a good job, customers will return.
Tipping is entirely at the customer's discretion, and many do it.” Admittedly this confuses a lot of passengers: On the one hand, if you're in the United States, you're asked to tip, and you're being provided a service, many may feel cheap not tipping.
Room service: Food delivery is tipped similarly to a restaurant at 15-20% but is typically included in the bill. Shuttle drivers: You are welcome and encouraged to tip your shuttle driver, especially if the service and hospitality were outstanding. The Parking Spot makes it easy to tip your driver.
Well, the answer to this question is no, you cannot tip TSA workers, and if you do, it could actually cause more harm than good. In a Washington Post op-ed written by TSA Agent Angel Stephensen describes a scenario in which a passenger attempted to give her a cash tip. I had to refuse, she wrote.