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Tipping tradesmen. How much?

64 replies

HurdyGurdy19 · 22/11/2024 12:35

We have had our downstairs cloakroom refurbished this week.

The quote from the plumber, for the whole job, was £3,500 plus VAT.

He has brought in other trades - carpenter, tiler, and plasterer. All part of the quote.

How much would you tip?

10%, as in restaurants, or a fixed amount?

My husband suggested "enough for a couple of rounds", but my leaning is more towards a couple of hundred pounds.

What, if anything, would you tip?

(I hate this tip culture, and resent feeling obliged to offer any extra, but always feel that you should look after a good tradie for when you need them again.)

OP posts:
CallMeFlo · 22/11/2024 12:39

Nothing. You've paid him what £4200 for a job. That's a price he set & is presumably happy with. Why on earth would you tip him???

I'd thank him for a job well done & tell him you'll recommend him to anyone needing his kind of work

Tipping is madness

peepsquick · 22/11/2024 12:39
  1. I have never tipped a tradesperson. They charge what the job is worth.
peepsquick · 22/11/2024 12:39

That random bullet point was a zero!

Buddhistcauliflower · 22/11/2024 12:39

Nothing

EternallyIrked · 22/11/2024 12:40

Tipping tradespeople is not a thing. They set their own rates!

peepsquick · 22/11/2024 12:40

And yes I always say I will leave a positive review if happy with their work. That's got to be more valuable?

Crocsforlife · 22/11/2024 12:40

nothing. Offer them a cuppa and biscuit.

hopeishere · 22/11/2024 12:41

Nothing. You've paid them to do a job. Up to the person who subcontracted them to buy a few rounds.

Sia8899 · 22/11/2024 12:43

I've never heard of someone tipping a tradesman unless they went above and beyond. Or perhaps if they're doing long-term work and you give them some kind of Christmas bonus (like the postman and bin men - but I don't think people do that any more!). £20 for a round on you would be a nice gesture but not really necessary

Onthesideofthespiders · 22/11/2024 12:44

You don’t tip tradesmen.
When they’re working, you give them drinks and snacks and maybe a bacon sandwich etc. Basically just be nice while they’re working. You don’t tip them. Who told you to do that?

HurdyGurdy19 · 22/11/2024 12:44

Oh wow. Thank you. You've just saved me a decent chunk of money 😀

They did get copious amounts of tea and coffee, biscuits, and home baked cakes

OP posts:
BarnacleBeasley · 22/11/2024 12:46

I'm pretty sure my plumber has got more money than I have.

FruitBadger · 22/11/2024 12:47

ExDH is a builder. Absolutely no need or expectation to tip, it's not a thing for trades at all.

Coffee / tea / biscuits whilst they're there are much appreciated. Paying promptly too.

If you really wanted to push the boat out a 4 pack of beer / bottle of wine etc at the end of the job would be the absolute icing on the cake. The number of times that happened in the 20+ years I was with DH you could count on two hands and was more linked to it being near Christmas, one of our children being born or him really going above and beyond.

mydamnfootstuckinthedoor · 22/11/2024 12:56

I tip the apprentice if there is one. £10.

Clickncollect · 22/11/2024 12:57

What fresh hell is this? I consider myself a decent tipper in other industries but not in
the trades exept for when they’ve gone above and beyond and I’ve given them 20/30 quid ‘for a drink’. Example - a decorator came round recently to repair some other trades balls up and he charged me his daily rate but but I gave him another 30 as he did a great job.
Sadly, I tend to attract rip off merchants and cowboys so they’re never getting drink money, just the agreed price.

Chuchuchu · 22/11/2024 13:01

This is the uk ,unless you are upper class, do we have a “ tip culture” for tradespeople??

mondaytosunday · 22/11/2024 13:02

Nothing. I don't tip trades (and I've worked with a lot as doing up houses is my thing) - I tip movers say £20 each but a tradie usually works for themselves. I did have some guys working near Christmas time and gave them all a decent bottle of wine each.

CoastalCalm · 22/11/2024 13:03

On occasion I’ve given them a case of beer or an extra £20 for a drink if they’ve fitted me in at short notice etc but for a scheduled invoiced job no tip needed

Maurepas · 22/11/2024 13:03

No, no, NO!. Do not start that!

peepsquick · 22/11/2024 13:04

@Clickncollect but surely you're just tipping the thing you're calling fresh hell? In your example he is charging his daily rate, what has the fact it's a correction got to do with anything? You say you mostly get cowboys so you don't tip them, so you tip anyone who seems better than a cowboy? But they're just doing their job? So should just get their rate?

peepsquick · 22/11/2024 13:04

And what is "above and beyond"?

MrsSkylerWhite · 22/11/2024 13:05

Nothing. Just provide tea and biscuits.

CookieMonster28 · 22/11/2024 13:06

I think if you're really happy and impressed then a gesture for a round of drinks is a nice touch, definitely not 10%!

FruitBadger · 22/11/2024 13:15

peepsquick · 22/11/2024 13:04

And what is "above and beyond"?

Generally doing "emergency" work at short notice, in an evening, weekend or bank holiday. One phone call from a valued, existing customer was on Boxing Day morning. Ex was with them within 2 hours and spent 4 hours fixing the problem. We rearranged family plans that day because they were in a shit situation and were lovely people that he wanted to help.

peepsquick · 22/11/2024 13:19

@FruitBadger do you not charge a call out fee or more for bank holidays?