separate checks in the USA?
#1
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Is it perceived as poor manners to ask for separate checks at restaurants in the US... To ask the staff to break it down by what each person had to eat and drink and then separate credit card charges ?
Is it perceived as poor manners to ask for separate checks at restaurants in the US... To ask the staff to break it down by what each person had to eat and drink and then separate credit card charges ?
#2
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 46
No.
Quite often the server will ask if separate checks are required. I've never had one look even slightly annoyed by it.
Quite often the server will ask if separate checks are required. I've never had one look even slightly annoyed by it.
#3
Join Date: Jan 2002
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In my experience a few servers have refused to do it but most have no problem giving separate checks. Just be sure to ask before you start placing your orders.
#4
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Ask up front if it's a problem, in most cases I bet they tell you no it's not and let you do it.
If you ask after the meal I would expect they may not be thrilled to do it for you.
If you ask after the meal I would expect they may not be thrilled to do it for you.
#5
Join Date: Apr 2010
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cordelli is absolutely right. when i used to wait on tables years ago in college, separate checks were part of job. it's much easier to handle if you let the server know ahead of time.
#6
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If you don't ask up front, it's OK at the finish to plunk down two or three credit cards and ask the server to charge them all equally.
#7
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I, long ago, reached a simple answer to this seemingly constant conumdrum, the wait person who refuses to provide separate checks....
1. Separate checks. We tip.
2. No separate checks. No tip.
Marvelous motivator!
1. Separate checks. We tip.
2. No separate checks. No tip.
Marvelous motivator!
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Is it perceived as poor manners to ask for separate checks at restaurants in the US... To ask the staff to break it down by what each person had to eat and drink and then separate credit card charges ?
Is it perceived as poor manners to ask for separate checks at restaurants in the US... To ask the staff to break it down by what each person had to eat and drink and then separate credit card charges ?
As cordelli said, if you're going to ask, make sure to let the server know before ordering.
Several places I've been which didn't do it wouldn't do it as a matter of house policy, not the individual waiter's. In general, that got them written off the list of places we went for work lunches, but I'd be very hesitant to suggest not tipping unless I knew other waiters in the place would (in which case, I'd take a refusal to split a check as a reason to ask the manager/host for a new server or a new table.)
#9
Join Date: May 2010
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If you are in, for example, a college town, 99% of people ask for separate checks. So much so that some servers will just go ahead and separate them without even asking. Back in the real world, though, its polite to at least give a heads up when placing your order. Generally speaking, every restaurant should have the capability of splitting checks. I've heard servers say the computer won't let them do it after the order was entered in. This isn't true. Ask for a manager. Now I suppose it may be the restaurant's policy to not split checks, in which case, you can proceed however you want. I've seen plenty of people outright refuse to pay the "18% gratuity on parties of 6 or more" because they didn't agree with the "policy"..
#10
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It's good practice to check the menu for fine print regarding the restaurant's policy on separate checks, shared plates, take-out orders, large parties, what credit cards are accepted, etc.
Between consulting the printed policy on the menu and notifying the server at the time of ordering, you should not have any problems.
Between consulting the printed policy on the menu and notifying the server at the time of ordering, you should not have any problems.
#11
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Being young, I find that about 90% of the time when my friends and I go out to eat, the server will split our check without us even asking. If you want it split, as long as you ask right at the start, I would imagine it's really no big deal. Just be sure you all still tip accordingly!
#12




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A few years ago, the Sr. Manager on our project came into town and invited the team out to dinner (about 35 people). He asked for separate checks prior to anyone else arriving. It was quite embarrassing when the waiter came around to each of us at the end of the meal.
My point being, it's okay to ask for a group up to about 8 or 10. More than that, I would consider just keeping a copy of the check and divvying it up later.
My point being, it's okay to ask for a group up to about 8 or 10. More than that, I would consider just keeping a copy of the check and divvying it up later.
#13
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It depends on what you define as a restaurant. Should you be talking about a Chili's, then they will do it no problem. In fact, if you're talking about any place where you go out and eat with people and end up wanting to split the check, it's likely low end enough for it to matter.
In a real dining room, it is considered poor manners largely because the staff are much more task saturated and require more time with each table. Having wait staff tied up for 5-10 minutes creating 7-8 bills and running through the same number of cards or making change really impacts the service.
There's an easier way that people with social skills split the bill. Say two couples are out for dinner. It's more common in a nice place to have either one pickup the bill or one spouse from each couple throw down a card and split it. On the aggregate it balances out. Not many people are that cheap that when they're out with friends, they count every penny.
Dining rooms work much better when staff aren't tied up playing cashier.
Really? You've personally inspected every computer system that every single restaurant uses across the country? Provide some proof or you should qualify or retract that statement.
In a real dining room, it is considered poor manners largely because the staff are much more task saturated and require more time with each table. Having wait staff tied up for 5-10 minutes creating 7-8 bills and running through the same number of cards or making change really impacts the service.
There's an easier way that people with social skills split the bill. Say two couples are out for dinner. It's more common in a nice place to have either one pickup the bill or one spouse from each couple throw down a card and split it. On the aggregate it balances out. Not many people are that cheap that when they're out with friends, they count every penny.
Dining rooms work much better when staff aren't tied up playing cashier.
I've heard servers say the computer won't let them do it after the order was entered in. This isn't true.
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#15
Join Date: May 2010
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Could a restaurant have used some obscure vendor? Sure, but most are on a Micros system.

