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Tip Calculator

Calculate tips & split bills easily

$
person

β—ˆ How to Use

1

Enter your total bill amount

2

Select a tip percentage or enter a custom amount

3

Optionally split the bill among multiple people and see per-person totals

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Related Tools

β—‰ Who Is This For?

  • βœ“Diners calculating tips at restaurants
  • βœ“Groups splitting a bill evenly
  • βœ“Travelers tipping in unfamiliar regions

β˜… Why Choose EllyTools?

100% Free & Unlimited

No sign-up, no limits. Use as many times as you want.

Privacy First

All processing happens in your browser. Your files never leave your device.

No Installation Required

Works directly in your browser on any device β€” desktop, tablet, or phone.

Fast & Reliable

Instant results powered by modern browser technology.

Tip Calculator Guide: How Much to Tip in 2026, Around the World, and Mental Math Shortcuts

Tipping is one of the most consistently confusing parts of dining out β€” what's the standard percentage today, do you tip on tax, what about delivery, and how do you handle a group? This guide gives you both the calculator math and the social conventions, country by country.

The simplest version of tipping is just a percentage of the bill. 18% on $60 = $10.80. The math is trivial, which is why it surprises people that tipping is one of the things they second-guess most often. The hard part isn't the arithmetic β€” it's the social rules that keep changing, vary by country, and can shift the 'right' amount by 10 or more percentage points.

In the US, what counted as a 'standard' tip in 2010 (15%) is now considered low. Counter service tipping spread rapidly during the pandemic and stuck. Meanwhile, in much of Europe and East Asia, leaving any tip at all can be unusual or even mildly offensive. A good tip calculator helps with the math; this guide helps with everything else.

Tipping conventions in 2026

These are the typical ranges in each country. Expectations move over time and vary by city β€” when in doubt, defer to local custom.

CountrySit-down restaurantCounter / takeout
USA18–22% (servers paid below minimum wage)0–10% optional
Canada15–20%0–10%
UK10–15% (often included as 'service charge')Not expected
FranceService compris (included). 1–5€ for good service.Not expected
GermanyRound up or 5–10%Not expected
ItalyCoperto fee usually included; round up or 5–10% on topNot expected
JapanNot customary β€” sometimes refusedNot customary
South KoreaNot customary β€” included in the priceNot customary
ChinaNot customary in most regionsNot customary
AustraliaRound up or 10% for good serviceNot expected
Brazil10% (often included)Not expected
Mexico10–15%Loose change is fine

Tipping on tax: yes or no?

In the US, the strict-traditional rule is to tip on the pre-tax subtotal, since tax doesn't go to the server. In practice many people just tip on the total because it's faster and the dollar difference is small (an 8% sales tax on a $60 meal adds about 90 cents to a 20% tip).

If your bill prints both, use the pre-tax line. If not, tipping on the total is fine and increasingly the default β€” including in most tip-suggestion screens at modern POS terminals.

Other tipping situations

Delivery (food)
$3–6 minimum or 15–20% of the order, whichever is higher. Bad weather and long distances warrant more.
Coffee / counter service
Optional. $1 per drink or 10% is generous; round-up is the floor.
Bartender (US)
$1–2 per drink or 18–20% of the tab. Cocktails warrant the higher end.
Hotel housekeeping (US)
$2–5 per night, left in an envelope marked 'housekeeping' so it's clear.
Tour guide
10–15% of the tour price for paid tours; $5–20 cash for free walking tours.
Hairdresser / salon
15–20% of the service price.
Rideshare (Uber/Lyft)
10–20% via in-app tip after the ride.

Splitting the bill in a group

  1. 1

    Decide the total tip first

    Easier than splitting tips per item. Use the calculator to compute, say, 20% of the full bill.

  2. 2

    Add the tip to the bill total

    $120 bill Γ— 1.20 = $144 total.

  3. 3

    Divide by people

    $144 / 4 = $36 per person.

  4. 4

    Round up if there's awkward change

    Pay a touch more rather than a touch less; the server doesn't have to count pennies.

  5. 5

    If splitting per-item, tip on your portion

    Each person calculates their item subtotal Γ— 1.20.

Mental math shortcuts

  • β€’20% β€” move the decimal one place left and double. $48 β†’ $4.80 β†’ $9.60.
  • β€’15% β€” 10% plus half of that. $60 β†’ $6 + $3 = $9.
  • β€’18% β€” 20% minus 10% of that. $50 β†’ $10 – $1 = $9.
  • β€’Round to whole dollars β€” $9.60 β†’ $10. Servers are not insulted by the round-up.

Extended FAQ

Should I tip on the gift-card portion of a bill?

Yes. The gift card pays the food cost; you still tip on the full menu price as if you'd paid cash.

What if a service charge is already included?

Don't double-tip. Some restaurants (especially in tourist areas) add an 18% service charge automatically. Check the bill carefully.

Is it OK to tip less for bad service in the US?

Yes β€” but the floor is generally 15% even for mediocre service, and complaints about service are better addressed to a manager. Tipping zero is reserved for actual abuse, not slow service.

Why do tip suggestions on POS terminals start at 18% now?

Inflation and broader tipping expectations. Many merchants set their POS defaults at 18/20/25%. You can always tap 'custom' and enter any amount including zero.

Does this calculator save the tips I compute?

No. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is stored or sent anywhere.