What Are Tips And Gratuities?
Tips and gratuities are money left for an employee by a satisfied customer over and above the actual amount of a service or a good. Tips can either be paid as cash or through a credit card. Besides, an employer may also impose a mandatory service charge. Typically, for any amount to be considered as a tip or a gratuity, it should be:
- Given voluntarily by the customer.
- The amount is not subject to negotiation either by the employee or the employer.
- The customer is not restricted to who receives the tip or gratuity or the amount to be given.
Even if an employee receives tips, he/she should receive the minimum wage for every hour worked. Unfortunately, most employees are taken advantage of by their employers. In summary, an employee has the below rights under the California tip law:
- The tips or gratuities belong to the employee alone.
- The tips or gratuities should not be shared with the employers or managers
- The employer should not credit the amount received as tips against employees’ wages, nor should they be counted as overtime.
When Should Tips Be Paid?
Any payment for tips or gratuities must be made available to workers immediately when they are received. As easy as it may seem, a tip may become complicated when the employer imposes a mandatory service charge or pays the employee by credit card. A worker has no legal right to any money obtained through a service charge. However, some employers give their workers at least some part of the charges. If the customers use credit cards, the payment should be paid on the next regular payday after the credit card's authorization. One of the main questions that arise is whether an employer should deduct the credit card processing fee when paying the employees' tips. Under California law for tipped employees, an employer is supposed to pay for the processing fee's full cost and hence give the employee a full tip left by a customer. It’s worth noting that tips and gratuities received from mandatory service charges can be considered as taxable income, just like regular wages.
Tip pooling Is legal
In California, the employer may allow a group of employees to gather some or all tips earned and then divide them into an agreed percentage. However, for this to happen, specific criteria must be followed to ensure a valid tip pool. The rule is that:
- The pool must be composed of certain employees only. That is employees in a chain or service. For instance, bartenders or servers are considered together in a chain of service, while cashiers or cooks may be in another chain of service.
- The share from the tip pool must be distributed fairly and in a reasonable manner. Meaning, the share must be equal to the service each employee provided to the customer. For instance, the server should not receive the same tip as the bartender.
- The tip pooling is only for employees; the managers or supervisors should not have a share from the pool.
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