Our free tip calculator takes the stress out of every bill β enter the amount, choose a tip percentage, and add the number of people splitting the cost. The total tip, grand total, and each person's share appear instantly. Whether you are at a restaurant, in a taxi, or tipping a service professional, this online tip calculator gives you the right number in seconds with no mental arithmetic required.
Tipping is a meaningful gesture β it directly affects the income of the people who serve you. Having an accurate, effortless tip calculator on hand means you can focus on the experience rather than the math at the end of it.
What Is a Tip Calculator?
A tip calculator is a tool that computes the gratuity on any bill and, optionally, divides the total evenly between multiple people. It applies the standard tip formula β Tip = Bill Γ (Percentage Γ· 100) β and adds the result to the original bill to give the grand total. What makes this simple tip calculator genuinely useful is the bill-splitting feature: rather than dividing a total in your head across three or four people, the tool handles the arithmetic instantly and precisely.
According to the Wikipedia overview of gratuity, tipping customs and expected amounts vary significantly across cultures, industries, and countries β which is why a flexible tool that accepts any percentage is more useful than a fixed-rate guide.
How to Use This Tip Calculator
- Enter the bill amount β type the subtotal shown on your receipt (before or after tax β your choice).
- Set your tip percentage β drag the slider or tap one of the quick-select buttons (10%, 15%, 18%, 20%).
- Enter the number of people β the tool divides the grand total equally and shows each person's share.
Results update live as you type, so there is no separate Calculate button to press. You can adjust the percentage or the split number and see the effect immediately β ideal for those last-minute conversations at the table about how much to leave.
Tip Percentage Guide β How Much Should You Tip?
The tip formula is straightforward, but knowing what percentage to apply is a social question as much as a mathematical one. In the United States, the standard benchmarks for restaurant service are:
- 10% or below β poor or very disappointing service.
- 15% β acceptable service that met basic expectations; increasingly seen as below-average for sit-down service.
- 18% β good service; a widely recognised standard in many American cities.
- 20% β great service; the most common choice among regular diners today.
- 25% or more β exceptional service, or a personal expression of generosity.
The Emily Post Institute's tipping guide β a leading authority on American etiquette β recommends 15β20% as the standard range for sit-down restaurant service, with 18β20% increasingly becoming the norm as awareness of service workers' reliance on tips has grown.
Restaurant Tip Calculator β Gratuity and Tax
This restaurant tip calculator is built for the most common use case: a group meal where everyone wants to pay their fair share including a fair gratuity. Enter the bill total and the result shows the exact tip amount, the grand total, and each person's share β no ambiguity, no debate.
On whether to tip before or after tax, etiquette experts generally recommend tipping on the pre-tax subtotal, but the practical difference is small on most bills. For a $100 meal at 8% tax and a 20% tip: tipping pre-tax gives a $20.00 tip; tipping on the post-tax total of $108 gives $21.60. This calculator accepts whichever number you enter β use the pre-tax subtotal for the technically correct figure, or the total shown on the bill for convenience. One important check: for larger groups, restaurants often add a service charge (auto-gratuity) already, so confirm it is not on the bill before adding a tip on top.
Tip Calculator Across Every Service Industry
This tool is not just a restaurant tip calculator β it works for any service where tipping is customary. Here are the standard ranges for the most common situations, based on Consumer Reports' tipping guidelines:
- Restaurant and bar servers β 15β20%, higher for exceptional service or at upscale venues.
- Food delivery drivers β typically 10β15% of the order total, with a minimum of $3β5 for small orders.
- Hair stylists and barbers β 15β20% is standard, the same for colour treatments and cuts.
- Nail salons β 15β20% is customary for manicures and pedicures.
- Massage therapists β 15β20% for standard services; 20%+ for exceptional care.
- Taxi and rideshare drivers β 10β15% is customary, or a round-up to the nearest dollar on shorter fares.
- Hotel housekeeping β $2β5 per night, left daily as staff rotas can change.
Enter any bill amount and apply the appropriate percentage for your situation β this tool works equally well as a server, delivery, salon, or general gratuity calculator.
Tipping Culture Around the World
Tipping norms vary enormously by country, and misreading local customs can cause embarrassment in either direction. In the USA and Canada, 15β20% in restaurants is a social expectation, not a bonus β service staff often depend on tips for the majority of their income. In the UK and much of Europe, a smaller tip of 5β10% is appreciated but not obligatory, and a service charge is frequently already included. In Japan and parts of East Asia, tipping is culturally inappropriate and may even cause offence.
When travelling internationally, verify local customs before dining or using services. This tip calculator accepts any percentage from 0 to 40%, so it adapts to whatever norm applies wherever you are.
For more everyday money math, try our sales tax calculator, the discount calculator, or the percentage calculator. Browse everything at the free tools hub.
Frequently Asked Questions
Use this tip calculator β enter the bill and slide to your chosen percentage. For a quick mental shortcut: to find 10%, move the decimal one place left on the bill ($60 β $6.00). For 20%, double the 10% figure. For 15%, find 10% and add half again. The tool handles any percentage instantly.
Enter the bill amount and tip percentage, then set the number of people in the split field. The tool divides the full grand total β bill plus tip β equally and shows each person's exact share. For 4 people sharing an $80 bill at 20%: $80 + $16 tip = $96 total Γ· 4 = $24.00 each.
Etiquette convention says to tip on the pre-tax subtotal. In practice, most people tip on the full bill shown, for simplicity. The difference is small on most bills β use whichever figure you enter into the calculator.
The standard for both hair and beauty services is 15β20%. Enter your total service cost and set 20% for standard quality, slightly higher for exceptional work. For nail salons and pedicures, 15β20% is equally customary.
The standard is 10β15% of the order total, with a minimum of $3β5 for smaller orders where a percentage would be very low. For long-distance deliveries or difficult conditions (bad weather, stairs), 20% or a generous flat amount is a thoughtful choice.
Many restaurants add an automatic service charge (auto-gratuity) for larger groups, typically 18β20%. If one is already listed, you generally do not need to add more β though you can leave a little extra for outstanding service. Always read the bill before tipping to avoid paying twice.
Tipping is not legally required, but it is a strong social expectation in most US service contexts β particularly in restaurants, where servers often earn below the standard minimum wage with the legal assumption that tips will make up the difference. The practical standard is 15β20% at sit-down restaurants.
Yes β completely free, with no sign-up, no account, and no data stored. It works on any device including smartphones, making it ideal for quick use at the table, and it keeps working offline once the page has loaded.
