Prepaid Gratuities
#16
Original Member



Join Date: May 1998
Location: Palo Alto, CA, USA
Posts: 3,475
Another newbie gratuities question-- we will be cruising on Azamara which includes gratuities in their pricing. However, do I assume correctly that additional tips may be prudent for, say housekeeping, butler and waitstaff? I know drinks carry an added 15% for gratuity and, of course spa treatment and other added services will entail adding on a tip.
Our cruise is 15 nights starting and ending in Amsterdam and cruising Norwegian fjords. What monetary unit should we plan to use for cash tips?
Our cruise is 15 nights starting and ending in Amsterdam and cruising Norwegian fjords. What monetary unit should we plan to use for cash tips?
#17




Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: London, Ontario
Posts: 5,212
Another newbie gratuities question-- we will be cruising on Azamara which includes gratuities in their pricing. However, do I assume correctly that additional tips may be prudent for, say housekeeping, butler and waitstaff? I know drinks carry an added 15% for gratuity and, of course spa treatment and other added services will entail adding on a tip.
Our cruise is 15 nights starting and ending in Amsterdam and cruising Norwegian fjords. What monetary unit should we plan to use for cash tips?
Our cruise is 15 nights starting and ending in Amsterdam and cruising Norwegian fjords. What monetary unit should we plan to use for cash tips?
Fortunately there are now sites like cruise critic which have info easily obtainable about these things, and I strongly suggest looking over there about this. I would suggest that US Dollars would be the preferred currency.
#18




Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Westchester Co, NY or Rio Grande Valley, TX or ???
Programs: BA(E)C GfL/GGL, WN A-, Hyatt G, HH D, MAR T, Hz PC, was [UA2P, FL A+Elite, BD G]
Posts: 2,348
Another newbie gratuities question-- we will be cruising on Azamara which includes gratuities in their pricing. However, do I assume correctly that additional tips may be prudent for, say housekeeping, butler and waitstaff? I know drinks carry an added 15% for gratuity and, of course spa treatment and other added services will entail adding on a tip.
Our cruise is 15 nights starting and ending in Amsterdam and cruising Norwegian fjords. What monetary unit should we plan to use for cash tips?
Our cruise is 15 nights starting and ending in Amsterdam and cruising Norwegian fjords. What monetary unit should we plan to use for cash tips?
I was never in a suite on Azamara (so I can't tell you about tipping your butler), but when I cruised with them they were very clear that there should be no expectation of additional tipping for waitstaff and housekeeping. I did tip for "above-and-beyond" service when someone went the extra mile. YMMV.
#19
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 31
Never been on a cruise and have been looking to book our first one from Asia to UK. Could not believe this gratuities con. (we live in Australia & NZ tipping is not normal) so that is why I use the word con. HAL would require US$ 785 from me for tips!!!!!! they must be bl***y joking, found a UK ship where the daily tip is 3.95GBP/day/person still not used to this so will probably have to pay with great reluctance.
#20




Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: London, Ontario
Posts: 5,212
Never been on a cruise and have been looking to book our first one from Asia to UK. Could not believe this gratuities con. (we live in Australia & NZ tipping is not normal) so that is why I use the word con. HAL would require US$ 785 from me for tips!!!!!! they must be bl***y joking, found a UK ship where the daily tip is 3.95GBP/day/person still not used to this so will probably have to pay with great reluctance.
#21


Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: BG
Programs: BAEC Silver, TK Elite, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 844
What suprised me most on my last cruise was that they took the tips automatically after the 2nd day of a 7 day cruise. While I fully intended to leave the "suggested" gratitude, it did seem a little presumptuous before the service had been delivered.
#22




Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: London, Ontario
Posts: 5,212
When I was last on Princess, they charged it to our account on a daily basis. Royal Caribbean, I had to request they be charged. And Carnival charges them in one lump sum early in the cruise. I consider them to be a service fee, not tips, and part of the cost of cruising.
#24
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: About 45 miles NW of MCO
Programs: Acapulco - Gold, Panama - Red, Timothy Leary 8 Mile High Club
Posts: 31,356
Norwegian is the same as Princess. Paying the service charge before the cruise keeps your bill a little cleaner and easier to audit prior to disembarkation. Otherwise, it's an additional 14 lines (assuming 2 in the cabin) scattered across 7 days of drink, spa and excursion charges.
#25
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 509
$62/day gratuity for 2, is in my opinion steep: did you stay in a PH? with a butler, then reluctantly, OK.
#26
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Nov 1999
Programs: FB PLT again afater a decade as plebian
Posts: 22,946
Never had a problem with Holland America on 15-22 day cruises (which also incurs gratuity charges daily). Then again, we only spend on corkage and a few odd happy hour drinks which we keep track of as incurred. They've got us marked as cheapskates now. Spent less on the more-recent 22 day cruise than the earlier 15 day one.
It's $15-22 pp pd for gratuities (going up $1 pp pd) depending on cabin.
At the rates they charge ($400 pp pd for an itinerary cruise, $200+ for a repo - in inside cabins), they can easily include gratuities and a whole bunch of other things.
At the rates they charge ($400 pp pd for an itinerary cruise, $200+ for a repo - in inside cabins), they can easily include gratuities and a whole bunch of other things.
#27
Original Member



Join Date: May 1998
Location: Escondido CA USA
Programs: AS, UA, HY, Hil, Merr
Posts: 3,332
Is it a dollar, 4 quarters or 10 dines?
Crystal, Seabourn, Siverseas, and Regent 7 Seas have the main tips included. Do you really think you have not paid them when you paid your fare? Regent 7 Seas had an auction for fun "job rights", tending bar, interviewing an employee on their tv, eating with the chef...to raise money for the crew funds in addition. Totally optional.
Holland American and Celebrity charge an amount PP/PD dependent on cabin level to your bill. Holland allows a clawback if you disagree with the amount OR you can add more. Some clawback a portion and distribute in a manor they decide versus the way HAL might choose. Several years back HAL passed out envelopes and you did as you chose, although they did give recommendations.
As far as tips, generally these end up on your bill. Tips on board that you choose to hand to someone, normally would be in the currency of the ship, most often US $s.
Not mentioned, but for budgeting, don't forget shore excursions. When possible this should be in local currency. US$'s often ok otherwise. No coins, as they are very had to turn into local currency. Depending on your travel plans, there might be the hotel, taxi, bus to the ship, etc. Some of these may or may not be include in your fare. Read the brochure or docs. In Tahiti, don't try to pay Le Truck in US$s. The driver will cuss you out. OOps, guess I should have asked in advance.
Crystal, Seabourn, Siverseas, and Regent 7 Seas have the main tips included. Do you really think you have not paid them when you paid your fare? Regent 7 Seas had an auction for fun "job rights", tending bar, interviewing an employee on their tv, eating with the chef...to raise money for the crew funds in addition. Totally optional.
Holland American and Celebrity charge an amount PP/PD dependent on cabin level to your bill. Holland allows a clawback if you disagree with the amount OR you can add more. Some clawback a portion and distribute in a manor they decide versus the way HAL might choose. Several years back HAL passed out envelopes and you did as you chose, although they did give recommendations.
As far as tips, generally these end up on your bill. Tips on board that you choose to hand to someone, normally would be in the currency of the ship, most often US $s.
Not mentioned, but for budgeting, don't forget shore excursions. When possible this should be in local currency. US$'s often ok otherwise. No coins, as they are very had to turn into local currency. Depending on your travel plans, there might be the hotel, taxi, bus to the ship, etc. Some of these may or may not be include in your fare. Read the brochure or docs. In Tahiti, don't try to pay Le Truck in US$s. The driver will cuss you out. OOps, guess I should have asked in advance.
#28
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: About 45 miles NW of MCO
Programs: Acapulco - Gold, Panama - Red, Timothy Leary 8 Mile High Club
Posts: 31,356
One more advantage of prepaid gratuities made itself obvious today as I received an email from Norwegian Cruise Lines announcing an increase in the daily service charge (tip). If I prepay the charge before my final payment is due, I will be paying at the old rate. Admittedly it's not a big difference, less than $10 for a 7 day cruise, but I'd rather take it and spend it on myself. The increased charge is now $13.50 pp daily - a modest cost compared to the premium lines - but sure to crank up the volume of the whiners over on CruiseCritic.
#29
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: MSP
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Posts: 1,754
#30



Join Date: May 2011
Location: San Antonio, TX
Programs: AA EXP, DL Silver, Global Entry
Posts: 1,876
In my experience there has never been a "requirement" to pay gratuities. The cruiselines generally will suggest what is appropriate in their view and will even automatically charge the gratuities to your onboard account, but you always have the option to have the charge removed from your account and pay whatever you think is fair.

