Menopause Matters magazine ISSUE 81 out now. (Autumn issue, September 2025)
Nothing, I hate the culture of tipping. If they don't think they're getting enough they can put the price up. Money in a card at Xmas may be a good compromise. The shelf stacker at the supermarket may be more deserving of a tip than a hairdresser.
Legally they have to be shared.
Quote from: CLKD on July 30, 2022, 09:02:32 AMLegally they have to be shared.Do they really? All I can find on line is the GOV advice which is this:OverviewIf you get tips at work they do not count towards the National Minimum Wage. You still have to pay Income Tax on tips and may have to pay National Insurance.How tips are paidYou could get tips:directly from a customer in cash or electronically, for example through a mobile appas part of your pay packet from your employerthrough a separate system for managing and sharing out tips at your workplace (known as a ‘tronc’)How your employer handles tipsThe government has a Code of Best Practice on tips that says how your employer should handle them.Your employer does not have to follow it, but if they do they should have a policy on tips that includes information on:how tips are distributed or sharedthe name of the person responsible for managing tips (if there is one)if tips paid directly to staff members by customers are treated differentlyany deductions taken from tipswhat happens during leave, for example holidays, sick leave, parental leave