What is included in “hotel gratuities”?










5














I've recently booked a trip to Mexico through Groupon. The trip is booked as all-inclusive. There is a section in the deal description that says that all "hotel taxes and gratuities included." What can I reasonably assume is covered by hotel gratuities? Specifically, I'm concerned about these things:



  • We are working with the hotel to arrange a shuttle to pick us up from the airport and take us back to the hotel. Do I need to tip the driver?

  • As the trip is all-inclusive, we plan to do quite a bit of dining and drinking. Do we need to tip our servers/bartenders?

  • If we order room service, should we tip our delivery person?

  • What about standard hotel services, such as housekeeping, doormen, bellhops, etc?

I personally would feel more comfortable erring on the safe side and tipping liberally, but the people I am travelling with feel that tipping is unnecessary as it is already "covered in the trip expenses". I'd appreciate any insight that could help us determine when and where it is inappropriate to abstain from tipping.










share|improve this question























  • You are not expected to tip anybody, still some extra money coming from you will not be frowned up on
    – fernando.reyes
    Mar 9 '17 at 18:54















5














I've recently booked a trip to Mexico through Groupon. The trip is booked as all-inclusive. There is a section in the deal description that says that all "hotel taxes and gratuities included." What can I reasonably assume is covered by hotel gratuities? Specifically, I'm concerned about these things:



  • We are working with the hotel to arrange a shuttle to pick us up from the airport and take us back to the hotel. Do I need to tip the driver?

  • As the trip is all-inclusive, we plan to do quite a bit of dining and drinking. Do we need to tip our servers/bartenders?

  • If we order room service, should we tip our delivery person?

  • What about standard hotel services, such as housekeeping, doormen, bellhops, etc?

I personally would feel more comfortable erring on the safe side and tipping liberally, but the people I am travelling with feel that tipping is unnecessary as it is already "covered in the trip expenses". I'd appreciate any insight that could help us determine when and where it is inappropriate to abstain from tipping.










share|improve this question























  • You are not expected to tip anybody, still some extra money coming from you will not be frowned up on
    – fernando.reyes
    Mar 9 '17 at 18:54













5












5








5







I've recently booked a trip to Mexico through Groupon. The trip is booked as all-inclusive. There is a section in the deal description that says that all "hotel taxes and gratuities included." What can I reasonably assume is covered by hotel gratuities? Specifically, I'm concerned about these things:



  • We are working with the hotel to arrange a shuttle to pick us up from the airport and take us back to the hotel. Do I need to tip the driver?

  • As the trip is all-inclusive, we plan to do quite a bit of dining and drinking. Do we need to tip our servers/bartenders?

  • If we order room service, should we tip our delivery person?

  • What about standard hotel services, such as housekeeping, doormen, bellhops, etc?

I personally would feel more comfortable erring on the safe side and tipping liberally, but the people I am travelling with feel that tipping is unnecessary as it is already "covered in the trip expenses". I'd appreciate any insight that could help us determine when and where it is inappropriate to abstain from tipping.










share|improve this question















I've recently booked a trip to Mexico through Groupon. The trip is booked as all-inclusive. There is a section in the deal description that says that all "hotel taxes and gratuities included." What can I reasonably assume is covered by hotel gratuities? Specifically, I'm concerned about these things:



  • We are working with the hotel to arrange a shuttle to pick us up from the airport and take us back to the hotel. Do I need to tip the driver?

  • As the trip is all-inclusive, we plan to do quite a bit of dining and drinking. Do we need to tip our servers/bartenders?

  • If we order room service, should we tip our delivery person?

  • What about standard hotel services, such as housekeeping, doormen, bellhops, etc?

I personally would feel more comfortable erring on the safe side and tipping liberally, but the people I am travelling with feel that tipping is unnecessary as it is already "covered in the trip expenses". I'd appreciate any insight that could help us determine when and where it is inappropriate to abstain from tipping.







mexico tours tipping






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share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Mar 2 '17 at 22:41









JoErNanO

43.9k12136223




43.9k12136223










asked Mar 2 '17 at 22:32









kanderson8

283




283











  • You are not expected to tip anybody, still some extra money coming from you will not be frowned up on
    – fernando.reyes
    Mar 9 '17 at 18:54
















  • You are not expected to tip anybody, still some extra money coming from you will not be frowned up on
    – fernando.reyes
    Mar 9 '17 at 18:54















You are not expected to tip anybody, still some extra money coming from you will not be frowned up on
– fernando.reyes
Mar 9 '17 at 18:54




You are not expected to tip anybody, still some extra money coming from you will not be frowned up on
– fernando.reyes
Mar 9 '17 at 18:54










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3














It basically means that you are not expected to tip. In such resorts, people usually do not carry any cash, cards or even a wallet at all.



The bill at the end of the stay usually includes how much of the payement was used for involuntary tip. It's frankly a strange concept but in theory, you are allowed to tip more or even less if you have had an issue with service. I've never contested it, so I don't know how hard it is to get some back.



Now, you are concerned with extras. You can add some tip and it will rarely be refused from what I see but you will probably not be expected to tip the driver, porter or bar-tenders.






share|improve this answer




























    1














    To be sure, you'll have to ask the booking agent or contact the property directly.



    What they're trying to portray is the all-inclusive aspect, similar to a cruise benefit where gratuities are 'included' or 'pre-paid'.



    So, it's not wrong to not tip since the deal is advertised as 'all-inclusive, including gratuities' but, most people will still tip in many situations. You also have to consider they may be trying to reach markets where tipping is not as common as in the US.



    It is generally understood that personnel that you interact with regularly, such as a Room Steward, are more accommodating if you at a tipper even if they are pre-paid or included.



    I you want to recognize good service, tip.






    share|improve this answer




























      -1














      Your all-inclusive covers the room charges, meals (if that's part of your package), and taxes. Gratuities: whatever that suggests, in Mexico, you should tip. Tip your servers at dinner, the bartender at the end of the evening, the driver who collects you from the airport, the room service attendant, housekeeping at the end of stay, doormen and bellhops as they provide a service to you.



      Do it especially if you're staying in an all-inclusive resort: the team that is taking care of you and your needs is making, on average, less that $10 A A DAY: that's right, for the whole day. Mexican minimum wage is currently about $4.25 USD a day.



      Servers at all-inclusive resorts tend to get paid the minimum wage and, very often, receive the least amount in tips, since vacationers assume that all-inclusive includes tips, and assume that the 'gratuities' mentioned are passed on to service staff; they are not.



      Tip and you'll be treated like superstars by those who rely on tips: they'll go above and beyond to take very special care of you.



      Tip in cash and, better, tip in cash US dollars (not coins). For other expenditures, get your pesos at a bank's ATM for the best exchange rate.
      Tip as you would in the US: driver $1-2 dollars per bag, 5-10% for a driver who helps with luggage/bags. Tip the housekeeping $3-5 US for the visit; if you're messy (or demanding...), tip more. If you're there a week, $10. Bartenders, $1-$2 every several drinks, resort restaurant waiters $3-$4 a meal, concierge, $5 every so often (they're hugely helpful).



      All inclusive means there are no hidden fees or surprises, but there will be scores of people seeing to your every need and making sure you have a great time. It's appropriate to budget an additional $50-100 for tipping (similar to cruises) and, yes, it adds a bit to the cost of your trip.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 3




        The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
        – DJClayworth
        Mar 3 '17 at 3:50











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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

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      3














      It basically means that you are not expected to tip. In such resorts, people usually do not carry any cash, cards or even a wallet at all.



      The bill at the end of the stay usually includes how much of the payement was used for involuntary tip. It's frankly a strange concept but in theory, you are allowed to tip more or even less if you have had an issue with service. I've never contested it, so I don't know how hard it is to get some back.



      Now, you are concerned with extras. You can add some tip and it will rarely be refused from what I see but you will probably not be expected to tip the driver, porter or bar-tenders.






      share|improve this answer

























        3














        It basically means that you are not expected to tip. In such resorts, people usually do not carry any cash, cards or even a wallet at all.



        The bill at the end of the stay usually includes how much of the payement was used for involuntary tip. It's frankly a strange concept but in theory, you are allowed to tip more or even less if you have had an issue with service. I've never contested it, so I don't know how hard it is to get some back.



        Now, you are concerned with extras. You can add some tip and it will rarely be refused from what I see but you will probably not be expected to tip the driver, porter or bar-tenders.






        share|improve this answer























          3












          3








          3






          It basically means that you are not expected to tip. In such resorts, people usually do not carry any cash, cards or even a wallet at all.



          The bill at the end of the stay usually includes how much of the payement was used for involuntary tip. It's frankly a strange concept but in theory, you are allowed to tip more or even less if you have had an issue with service. I've never contested it, so I don't know how hard it is to get some back.



          Now, you are concerned with extras. You can add some tip and it will rarely be refused from what I see but you will probably not be expected to tip the driver, porter or bar-tenders.






          share|improve this answer












          It basically means that you are not expected to tip. In such resorts, people usually do not carry any cash, cards or even a wallet at all.



          The bill at the end of the stay usually includes how much of the payement was used for involuntary tip. It's frankly a strange concept but in theory, you are allowed to tip more or even less if you have had an issue with service. I've never contested it, so I don't know how hard it is to get some back.



          Now, you are concerned with extras. You can add some tip and it will rarely be refused from what I see but you will probably not be expected to tip the driver, porter or bar-tenders.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 3 '17 at 0:13









          Itai

          28.6k969153




          28.6k969153























              1














              To be sure, you'll have to ask the booking agent or contact the property directly.



              What they're trying to portray is the all-inclusive aspect, similar to a cruise benefit where gratuities are 'included' or 'pre-paid'.



              So, it's not wrong to not tip since the deal is advertised as 'all-inclusive, including gratuities' but, most people will still tip in many situations. You also have to consider they may be trying to reach markets where tipping is not as common as in the US.



              It is generally understood that personnel that you interact with regularly, such as a Room Steward, are more accommodating if you at a tipper even if they are pre-paid or included.



              I you want to recognize good service, tip.






              share|improve this answer

























                1














                To be sure, you'll have to ask the booking agent or contact the property directly.



                What they're trying to portray is the all-inclusive aspect, similar to a cruise benefit where gratuities are 'included' or 'pre-paid'.



                So, it's not wrong to not tip since the deal is advertised as 'all-inclusive, including gratuities' but, most people will still tip in many situations. You also have to consider they may be trying to reach markets where tipping is not as common as in the US.



                It is generally understood that personnel that you interact with regularly, such as a Room Steward, are more accommodating if you at a tipper even if they are pre-paid or included.



                I you want to recognize good service, tip.






                share|improve this answer























                  1












                  1








                  1






                  To be sure, you'll have to ask the booking agent or contact the property directly.



                  What they're trying to portray is the all-inclusive aspect, similar to a cruise benefit where gratuities are 'included' or 'pre-paid'.



                  So, it's not wrong to not tip since the deal is advertised as 'all-inclusive, including gratuities' but, most people will still tip in many situations. You also have to consider they may be trying to reach markets where tipping is not as common as in the US.



                  It is generally understood that personnel that you interact with regularly, such as a Room Steward, are more accommodating if you at a tipper even if they are pre-paid or included.



                  I you want to recognize good service, tip.






                  share|improve this answer












                  To be sure, you'll have to ask the booking agent or contact the property directly.



                  What they're trying to portray is the all-inclusive aspect, similar to a cruise benefit where gratuities are 'included' or 'pre-paid'.



                  So, it's not wrong to not tip since the deal is advertised as 'all-inclusive, including gratuities' but, most people will still tip in many situations. You also have to consider they may be trying to reach markets where tipping is not as common as in the US.



                  It is generally understood that personnel that you interact with regularly, such as a Room Steward, are more accommodating if you at a tipper even if they are pre-paid or included.



                  I you want to recognize good service, tip.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 2 '17 at 23:37









                  Johns-305

                  28.3k15697




                  28.3k15697





















                      -1














                      Your all-inclusive covers the room charges, meals (if that's part of your package), and taxes. Gratuities: whatever that suggests, in Mexico, you should tip. Tip your servers at dinner, the bartender at the end of the evening, the driver who collects you from the airport, the room service attendant, housekeeping at the end of stay, doormen and bellhops as they provide a service to you.



                      Do it especially if you're staying in an all-inclusive resort: the team that is taking care of you and your needs is making, on average, less that $10 A A DAY: that's right, for the whole day. Mexican minimum wage is currently about $4.25 USD a day.



                      Servers at all-inclusive resorts tend to get paid the minimum wage and, very often, receive the least amount in tips, since vacationers assume that all-inclusive includes tips, and assume that the 'gratuities' mentioned are passed on to service staff; they are not.



                      Tip and you'll be treated like superstars by those who rely on tips: they'll go above and beyond to take very special care of you.



                      Tip in cash and, better, tip in cash US dollars (not coins). For other expenditures, get your pesos at a bank's ATM for the best exchange rate.
                      Tip as you would in the US: driver $1-2 dollars per bag, 5-10% for a driver who helps with luggage/bags. Tip the housekeeping $3-5 US for the visit; if you're messy (or demanding...), tip more. If you're there a week, $10. Bartenders, $1-$2 every several drinks, resort restaurant waiters $3-$4 a meal, concierge, $5 every so often (they're hugely helpful).



                      All inclusive means there are no hidden fees or surprises, but there will be scores of people seeing to your every need and making sure you have a great time. It's appropriate to budget an additional $50-100 for tipping (similar to cruises) and, yes, it adds a bit to the cost of your trip.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 3




                        The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
                        – DJClayworth
                        Mar 3 '17 at 3:50
















                      -1














                      Your all-inclusive covers the room charges, meals (if that's part of your package), and taxes. Gratuities: whatever that suggests, in Mexico, you should tip. Tip your servers at dinner, the bartender at the end of the evening, the driver who collects you from the airport, the room service attendant, housekeeping at the end of stay, doormen and bellhops as they provide a service to you.



                      Do it especially if you're staying in an all-inclusive resort: the team that is taking care of you and your needs is making, on average, less that $10 A A DAY: that's right, for the whole day. Mexican minimum wage is currently about $4.25 USD a day.



                      Servers at all-inclusive resorts tend to get paid the minimum wage and, very often, receive the least amount in tips, since vacationers assume that all-inclusive includes tips, and assume that the 'gratuities' mentioned are passed on to service staff; they are not.



                      Tip and you'll be treated like superstars by those who rely on tips: they'll go above and beyond to take very special care of you.



                      Tip in cash and, better, tip in cash US dollars (not coins). For other expenditures, get your pesos at a bank's ATM for the best exchange rate.
                      Tip as you would in the US: driver $1-2 dollars per bag, 5-10% for a driver who helps with luggage/bags. Tip the housekeeping $3-5 US for the visit; if you're messy (or demanding...), tip more. If you're there a week, $10. Bartenders, $1-$2 every several drinks, resort restaurant waiters $3-$4 a meal, concierge, $5 every so often (they're hugely helpful).



                      All inclusive means there are no hidden fees or surprises, but there will be scores of people seeing to your every need and making sure you have a great time. It's appropriate to budget an additional $50-100 for tipping (similar to cruises) and, yes, it adds a bit to the cost of your trip.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 3




                        The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
                        – DJClayworth
                        Mar 3 '17 at 3:50














                      -1












                      -1








                      -1






                      Your all-inclusive covers the room charges, meals (if that's part of your package), and taxes. Gratuities: whatever that suggests, in Mexico, you should tip. Tip your servers at dinner, the bartender at the end of the evening, the driver who collects you from the airport, the room service attendant, housekeeping at the end of stay, doormen and bellhops as they provide a service to you.



                      Do it especially if you're staying in an all-inclusive resort: the team that is taking care of you and your needs is making, on average, less that $10 A A DAY: that's right, for the whole day. Mexican minimum wage is currently about $4.25 USD a day.



                      Servers at all-inclusive resorts tend to get paid the minimum wage and, very often, receive the least amount in tips, since vacationers assume that all-inclusive includes tips, and assume that the 'gratuities' mentioned are passed on to service staff; they are not.



                      Tip and you'll be treated like superstars by those who rely on tips: they'll go above and beyond to take very special care of you.



                      Tip in cash and, better, tip in cash US dollars (not coins). For other expenditures, get your pesos at a bank's ATM for the best exchange rate.
                      Tip as you would in the US: driver $1-2 dollars per bag, 5-10% for a driver who helps with luggage/bags. Tip the housekeeping $3-5 US for the visit; if you're messy (or demanding...), tip more. If you're there a week, $10. Bartenders, $1-$2 every several drinks, resort restaurant waiters $3-$4 a meal, concierge, $5 every so often (they're hugely helpful).



                      All inclusive means there are no hidden fees or surprises, but there will be scores of people seeing to your every need and making sure you have a great time. It's appropriate to budget an additional $50-100 for tipping (similar to cruises) and, yes, it adds a bit to the cost of your trip.






                      share|improve this answer














                      Your all-inclusive covers the room charges, meals (if that's part of your package), and taxes. Gratuities: whatever that suggests, in Mexico, you should tip. Tip your servers at dinner, the bartender at the end of the evening, the driver who collects you from the airport, the room service attendant, housekeeping at the end of stay, doormen and bellhops as they provide a service to you.



                      Do it especially if you're staying in an all-inclusive resort: the team that is taking care of you and your needs is making, on average, less that $10 A A DAY: that's right, for the whole day. Mexican minimum wage is currently about $4.25 USD a day.



                      Servers at all-inclusive resorts tend to get paid the minimum wage and, very often, receive the least amount in tips, since vacationers assume that all-inclusive includes tips, and assume that the 'gratuities' mentioned are passed on to service staff; they are not.



                      Tip and you'll be treated like superstars by those who rely on tips: they'll go above and beyond to take very special care of you.



                      Tip in cash and, better, tip in cash US dollars (not coins). For other expenditures, get your pesos at a bank's ATM for the best exchange rate.
                      Tip as you would in the US: driver $1-2 dollars per bag, 5-10% for a driver who helps with luggage/bags. Tip the housekeeping $3-5 US for the visit; if you're messy (or demanding...), tip more. If you're there a week, $10. Bartenders, $1-$2 every several drinks, resort restaurant waiters $3-$4 a meal, concierge, $5 every so often (they're hugely helpful).



                      All inclusive means there are no hidden fees or surprises, but there will be scores of people seeing to your every need and making sure you have a great time. It's appropriate to budget an additional $50-100 for tipping (similar to cruises) and, yes, it adds a bit to the cost of your trip.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Mar 3 '17 at 13:19

























                      answered Mar 3 '17 at 0:12









                      Giorgio

                      31.6k964177




                      31.6k964177







                      • 3




                        The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
                        – DJClayworth
                        Mar 3 '17 at 3:50













                      • 3




                        The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
                        – DJClayworth
                        Mar 3 '17 at 3:50








                      3




                      3




                      The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
                      – DJClayworth
                      Mar 3 '17 at 3:50





                      The questioner is asking what the term means. It means you don't have to tip, and are not expected to. Whether or not you personally think they should tip anyway is irrelevant.
                      – DJClayworth
                      Mar 3 '17 at 3:50


















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