Best-of list · Guide
Tipping at bars explained: what you should actually leave, how tipping norms vary by city, and why it matters more than most guests realise.
The short answer
8 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.
Tipping at bars is one of the most practically important and least clearly communicated norms in the entire drinking industry. The rules vary dramatically by city, by bar type, and by country — what is expected in New York is considered unusual in London, and what works in London looks miserly in Tokyo compared to local custom. We have spent years asking bartenders directly what they prefer, and what we learned is worth passing on clearly without the usual hedging. For a broader look at how US and UK bar culture diverge — rounds vs tabs, opening hours, pub etiquette — read our deep-dive on how bars differ between the USA and the UK.
In the United States, tipping at bars is not optional — it is structural. Bartenders in most states are paid a lower base wage on the assumption that tips make up the difference. In New York, the service industry minimum wage applies to tipped workers, but the calculation is built around a tipped income that assumes a certain percentage per drink. The standard at a cocktail bar in New York or Chicago is 20% of the pre-tax total. At a beer-and-shot bar, $1 per drink is the floor and $2 per drink is the norm for attentive service.
The bars where tipping confusion most often occurs are the new model cocktail bars that have moved to a service-included pricing model — where the tip is built into the menu price. These bars typically display a notice on the menu or at the bar. If you see one, the standard is to verify whether additional tipping is expected. In most cases with service-included pricing, the staff are on a living wage and additional tipping is appreciated but not relied upon.
How we picked
The simplest rule: match the culture of the city you are in. In New York and Chicago, 20% at a cocktail bar is the correct starting point, and it should not require calculation — it is the cost of the evening properly understood. In London, round up or add a pound per round and consider the discretionary service charge a fair contribution. In Japan, engage sincerely with what the bartender is doing and do not leave money on the counter. In the rest of Europe, somewhere between the London and US models applies depending on the service format. When in doubt, ask the bar's staff — they appreciate the question more than the silence.
James has been tipping bartenders in 40 countries and has developed strong opinions about the practice. He tips 20% at home and adapts consciously when abroad. Based in New York.
Last reviewed 2026-04-15 · The editors recheck hours and closures against current local coverage.