Last weekend I went on a countryside walk with a friend. After walking for a couple of hours, we encountered an inn where we had lunch. The inn was a bit fancy so the total bill was about 70€. It was my turn to pay, so I settled up and then headed off to the toilet on our way out. During this time, our waiter accosted my friend and complained that we had not left a tip. I'm accustomed to leave a 20-25% tip in the US, but usually only put some money in the tip jar by the Kasse here in DE. What about this meal suggests that I should have left a tip? The price? The fact that we had table service? I've often had table service where no one appears to expect a tip.
Thanks,
Alison
tipping etiquette
Re: tipping etiquette
I took the liberty to move this topic to "Berlin", as the tipping etiquette in Germany is not the same everywhere.
Berlin is special, it ain't the Germany standard...
- john_b
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Re: tipping etiquette
FWIW "countryside walk" could easily mean Brandenburg, which isn't Berlin either...
What happened there is less about the price or “fanciness” of the inn and more about a mismatch of expectations—and, quite possibly, a waiter overstepping the usual norms.
In Germany (or Europe, for that matter), tipping is customary but structurally different from the U.S. It isn’t a percentage-driven system and it isn’t treated as a quasi-obligation tied to staff wages. Service staff are paid a base wage, so the tip functions more as a small, discretionary acknowledgment of service rather than a core part of their income.
In a situation like the one described—table service, a sit-down meal, and a bill of around €70—the local norm would typically be to round up or add roughly 5–10%. So instead of paying exactly €70, most people would say something like “machen Sie 75” or leave €3–€5 extra. It’s done directly when paying the bill, not via a tip jar (those are more for cafés, takeaways, or self-service counters).
What stands out here is not that a tip was expected, but how it was handled. Actively confronting a guest about not tipping is generally considered poor form in Germany. It breaks the implicit social contract: tips are expected in a soft, understated way, and any dissatisfaction is usually internalised rather than voiced. Even in more tourist-heavy or upscale places, that kind of direct pressure is atypical and would often be perceived as rude.
So the “signal” that a tip would be appropriate wasn’t the price alone, but the combination of full table service and a proper meal in a restaurant setting. The misunderstanding comes from the American visitor treating Germany more like a no-tip culture (which it isn’t), while the waiter behaved more like they were operating in a high-tip, entitlement-driven environment (which Germany also isn’t).
In other words, both sides drifted away from the local norm—one by not tipping at all in a sit-down context, the other by making an issue of it.
(For the record, I would have probably paid €75-€77 depending on how good I felt the service had been)