How to tip in the USA with a European debit card









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Something I've noticed the last few times I've been in the US is that when I pay at a restaurant with my European debit card I'm given a receipt (after the card has been swiped) where I can input the tip, but when I then check my bank account only the total amount without the tip has been charged.



Is this normal? How can I avoid it?










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  • 3




    The system gets authorization for the meal amount, then later when the charge is posted the amount with tip is deducted. This take a few days to show, so checking online right away will only show the meal amount.
    – user13044
    Jun 3 '17 at 3:04










  • Handing the staff member some cash will work, if you do not want the confusion.
    – Willeke
    Jun 3 '17 at 8:28














up vote
3
down vote

favorite












Something I've noticed the last few times I've been in the US is that when I pay at a restaurant with my European debit card I'm given a receipt (after the card has been swiped) where I can input the tip, but when I then check my bank account only the total amount without the tip has been charged.



Is this normal? How can I avoid it?










share|improve this question



















  • 3




    The system gets authorization for the meal amount, then later when the charge is posted the amount with tip is deducted. This take a few days to show, so checking online right away will only show the meal amount.
    – user13044
    Jun 3 '17 at 3:04










  • Handing the staff member some cash will work, if you do not want the confusion.
    – Willeke
    Jun 3 '17 at 8:28












up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite











Something I've noticed the last few times I've been in the US is that when I pay at a restaurant with my European debit card I'm given a receipt (after the card has been swiped) where I can input the tip, but when I then check my bank account only the total amount without the tip has been charged.



Is this normal? How can I avoid it?










share|improve this question















Something I've noticed the last few times I've been in the US is that when I pay at a restaurant with my European debit card I'm given a receipt (after the card has been swiped) where I can input the tip, but when I then check my bank account only the total amount without the tip has been charged.



Is this normal? How can I avoid it?







usa payment-cards tipping






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 3 '17 at 13:26









phoog

67.2k10147215




67.2k10147215










asked Jun 3 '17 at 1:52









Matteo Pagliazzi

1898




1898







  • 3




    The system gets authorization for the meal amount, then later when the charge is posted the amount with tip is deducted. This take a few days to show, so checking online right away will only show the meal amount.
    – user13044
    Jun 3 '17 at 3:04










  • Handing the staff member some cash will work, if you do not want the confusion.
    – Willeke
    Jun 3 '17 at 8:28












  • 3




    The system gets authorization for the meal amount, then later when the charge is posted the amount with tip is deducted. This take a few days to show, so checking online right away will only show the meal amount.
    – user13044
    Jun 3 '17 at 3:04










  • Handing the staff member some cash will work, if you do not want the confusion.
    – Willeke
    Jun 3 '17 at 8:28







3




3




The system gets authorization for the meal amount, then later when the charge is posted the amount with tip is deducted. This take a few days to show, so checking online right away will only show the meal amount.
– user13044
Jun 3 '17 at 3:04




The system gets authorization for the meal amount, then later when the charge is posted the amount with tip is deducted. This take a few days to show, so checking online right away will only show the meal amount.
– user13044
Jun 3 '17 at 3:04












Handing the staff member some cash will work, if you do not want the confusion.
– Willeke
Jun 3 '17 at 8:28




Handing the staff member some cash will work, if you do not want the confusion.
– Willeke
Jun 3 '17 at 8:28










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
4
down vote



accepted










You're doing it right, and the process is the same no matter where the card is issued.



After you give the waitstaff your card, they will run it for an authorization, usually for the amount of your total, or in some cases for the total amount plus an estimate for the tip. This is just an authorization hold, and not a final charge, and will appear as such on your online banking account. It confirms that you have sufficient funds (or credit, in the case of a credit card) and places them on hold so they can't be spent twice. You then receive the credit card slip, write in the desired tip, and sign (remember to take your card back at this point).



Later, the restaurant staff will go back and enter the tip amounts into the point of sale system. The restaurant then settles all the transactions with their merchant bank in one batch process, and the authorization is replaced with an actual transaction for the correct amount, including your tip. This might happen overnight, or it could take a couple of days to be reflected on your account.



Sometimes at restaurants where you pay at the counter, you'll be prompted to select a tip amount directly on the credit card terminal, and the full charge including the tip will be processed immediately.



Note that authorization holds are not uncommon in the US, and pose a special hassle to travelers using debit cards in particular. Hotels often place a hold upon check-in to ensure you can cover any meals and incidental expenses, and gas stations will authorize a sufficient amount to ensure you do not pump fuel that you cannot afford to pay for. Releasing that hold may be near instantaneous or may take a couple of days, depending on whether it was a pin debit transaction or not and the banks involved. Since this is a hold against your bank account, it can cause frustration if your balance is low or you need the funds for something else.






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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    4
    down vote



    accepted










    You're doing it right, and the process is the same no matter where the card is issued.



    After you give the waitstaff your card, they will run it for an authorization, usually for the amount of your total, or in some cases for the total amount plus an estimate for the tip. This is just an authorization hold, and not a final charge, and will appear as such on your online banking account. It confirms that you have sufficient funds (or credit, in the case of a credit card) and places them on hold so they can't be spent twice. You then receive the credit card slip, write in the desired tip, and sign (remember to take your card back at this point).



    Later, the restaurant staff will go back and enter the tip amounts into the point of sale system. The restaurant then settles all the transactions with their merchant bank in one batch process, and the authorization is replaced with an actual transaction for the correct amount, including your tip. This might happen overnight, or it could take a couple of days to be reflected on your account.



    Sometimes at restaurants where you pay at the counter, you'll be prompted to select a tip amount directly on the credit card terminal, and the full charge including the tip will be processed immediately.



    Note that authorization holds are not uncommon in the US, and pose a special hassle to travelers using debit cards in particular. Hotels often place a hold upon check-in to ensure you can cover any meals and incidental expenses, and gas stations will authorize a sufficient amount to ensure you do not pump fuel that you cannot afford to pay for. Releasing that hold may be near instantaneous or may take a couple of days, depending on whether it was a pin debit transaction or not and the banks involved. Since this is a hold against your bank account, it can cause frustration if your balance is low or you need the funds for something else.






    share|improve this answer


























      up vote
      4
      down vote



      accepted










      You're doing it right, and the process is the same no matter where the card is issued.



      After you give the waitstaff your card, they will run it for an authorization, usually for the amount of your total, or in some cases for the total amount plus an estimate for the tip. This is just an authorization hold, and not a final charge, and will appear as such on your online banking account. It confirms that you have sufficient funds (or credit, in the case of a credit card) and places them on hold so they can't be spent twice. You then receive the credit card slip, write in the desired tip, and sign (remember to take your card back at this point).



      Later, the restaurant staff will go back and enter the tip amounts into the point of sale system. The restaurant then settles all the transactions with their merchant bank in one batch process, and the authorization is replaced with an actual transaction for the correct amount, including your tip. This might happen overnight, or it could take a couple of days to be reflected on your account.



      Sometimes at restaurants where you pay at the counter, you'll be prompted to select a tip amount directly on the credit card terminal, and the full charge including the tip will be processed immediately.



      Note that authorization holds are not uncommon in the US, and pose a special hassle to travelers using debit cards in particular. Hotels often place a hold upon check-in to ensure you can cover any meals and incidental expenses, and gas stations will authorize a sufficient amount to ensure you do not pump fuel that you cannot afford to pay for. Releasing that hold may be near instantaneous or may take a couple of days, depending on whether it was a pin debit transaction or not and the banks involved. Since this is a hold against your bank account, it can cause frustration if your balance is low or you need the funds for something else.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        4
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        4
        down vote



        accepted






        You're doing it right, and the process is the same no matter where the card is issued.



        After you give the waitstaff your card, they will run it for an authorization, usually for the amount of your total, or in some cases for the total amount plus an estimate for the tip. This is just an authorization hold, and not a final charge, and will appear as such on your online banking account. It confirms that you have sufficient funds (or credit, in the case of a credit card) and places them on hold so they can't be spent twice. You then receive the credit card slip, write in the desired tip, and sign (remember to take your card back at this point).



        Later, the restaurant staff will go back and enter the tip amounts into the point of sale system. The restaurant then settles all the transactions with their merchant bank in one batch process, and the authorization is replaced with an actual transaction for the correct amount, including your tip. This might happen overnight, or it could take a couple of days to be reflected on your account.



        Sometimes at restaurants where you pay at the counter, you'll be prompted to select a tip amount directly on the credit card terminal, and the full charge including the tip will be processed immediately.



        Note that authorization holds are not uncommon in the US, and pose a special hassle to travelers using debit cards in particular. Hotels often place a hold upon check-in to ensure you can cover any meals and incidental expenses, and gas stations will authorize a sufficient amount to ensure you do not pump fuel that you cannot afford to pay for. Releasing that hold may be near instantaneous or may take a couple of days, depending on whether it was a pin debit transaction or not and the banks involved. Since this is a hold against your bank account, it can cause frustration if your balance is low or you need the funds for something else.






        share|improve this answer














        You're doing it right, and the process is the same no matter where the card is issued.



        After you give the waitstaff your card, they will run it for an authorization, usually for the amount of your total, or in some cases for the total amount plus an estimate for the tip. This is just an authorization hold, and not a final charge, and will appear as such on your online banking account. It confirms that you have sufficient funds (or credit, in the case of a credit card) and places them on hold so they can't be spent twice. You then receive the credit card slip, write in the desired tip, and sign (remember to take your card back at this point).



        Later, the restaurant staff will go back and enter the tip amounts into the point of sale system. The restaurant then settles all the transactions with their merchant bank in one batch process, and the authorization is replaced with an actual transaction for the correct amount, including your tip. This might happen overnight, or it could take a couple of days to be reflected on your account.



        Sometimes at restaurants where you pay at the counter, you'll be prompted to select a tip amount directly on the credit card terminal, and the full charge including the tip will be processed immediately.



        Note that authorization holds are not uncommon in the US, and pose a special hassle to travelers using debit cards in particular. Hotels often place a hold upon check-in to ensure you can cover any meals and incidental expenses, and gas stations will authorize a sufficient amount to ensure you do not pump fuel that you cannot afford to pay for. Releasing that hold may be near instantaneous or may take a couple of days, depending on whether it was a pin debit transaction or not and the banks involved. Since this is a hold against your bank account, it can cause frustration if your balance is low or you need the funds for something else.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jun 3 '17 at 7:23

























        answered Jun 3 '17 at 7:15









        Zach Lipton

        58.4k10178239




        58.4k10178239



























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