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Average monthly salary in Poland is around 1000 PLN (few hundred bucks).


Teffle  22 | 1318  
10 Sep 2011 /  #361
Poles don't tip at all or tip less then people in North America?

NOBODY tips like North America : )

Well, I can't speak for all of Europe, but as far as I know the European norm is to tip in restaurants (unless the service is bad) but tipping in bars is kind of unheard of in my expereince. It really seems to be an American thing.
LwowskaKrakow  28 | 431  
10 Sep 2011 /  #362
It really seems to be an American thing.

Sure because waiters and waitresses do not get a guaranteed salary , without tips they would not survive and service is never included in the US.

I thought it was in Poland until i had breakfast 2 weeks ago at a place in Stare Miasto Krakow called Cherubino , i was surprised but it was written in big letters on their menu SERVICE IS NOT INCLUDED.

I always leave tips anyway but i was a surprised, is this legal?( to just depend on tips without a minimum wage?) I thought that in Europe service "has" to be included in cafés and restaurants and it sort of ensures waiters and waitresses get a salary.
gumishu  15 | 6182  
10 Sep 2011 /  #363
they do tip in London discos - a friend of mine used to work a couple of days a week in one more or less Polish disco in London and most of his income was from the tips (it was back in 2001)
poland_  
10 Sep 2011 /  #364
To be fair, automatic tipping for bar staff is rare outside the states and Canada. It's not just the Poles who don't do it.

Teffle, if you want service you tip. restaurant, bar, cafe bar or hotel, I always tip and so do the most of the people I know. If I go into a local hotel or restaurant in Warsaw for a meeting I know the service I will get is top notch, they know I will tip. I always give 10% on top, unless it is already included. Also if the service is **** I pulled the waiter to one side and told them why I am not tipping today. Furthermore I have been so impressed by some waiting staff that I have given them a business card and invited them in for an interview, lets not forget most people use the Horeca industry as a stop gap before they move onto something more rewarding.
Teffle  22 | 1318  
10 Sep 2011 /  #365
Teffle, if you want service you tip.

Where do you mean - in Poland?
FUZZYWICKETS  8 | 1878  
11 Sep 2011 /  #366
lwowskakrakow wrote:

without tips they would not survive and service is never included in the US.

wrong. in most restaurants, parties of 8 or more are charged 18% for service. "gratuity is included" is how it is usually written.
delphiandomine  86 | 17823  
11 Sep 2011 /  #367
is this legal?( to just depend on tips without a minimum wage?) I thought that in Europe service "has" to be included in cafés and restaurants and it sort of ensures waiters and waitresses get a salary.

What's legal in most of Europe is to use tips to contribute towards their wages. But they must be paid minimum wage regardless of what's left on the table.

The sign saying that service isn't included sounds like a scam to try and convince American tourists that they need to pay - when in fact, you've already paid.
wielki pan  2 | 250  
11 Sep 2011 /  #368
Are you saying that Poles are thieves?

You obviously haven't been around, your telling me that people who work behind the counter don't steal? Ask people who have a business or rather let people on this forum tell their stories! Stealing in the workplace are the legacies of the Communist era. Many ways to skin a cat Mr D , the 11th commandment holds ..thou shall not get caught.
OWELL  
11 Sep 2011 /  #369
To be fair, automatic tipping for bar staff is rare outside the states and Canada

when I came to poland first time and asked a polish pal about tipping and his answer was"I am paying my bill thats enough"lol:)
Ghost  
10 Nov 2011 /  #370
Bullshit, 750PLN for a teacher, I know teachers that work in a 100 student primary school on the country side and they earn more that twice as much. And people with a salary less than 2000PLN are usually the ones that didn't finish any kind of education except than secondary school.
pantsless  1 | 266  
11 Nov 2011 /  #371
Reading comprehension not your strong suit? Let's see if you can figure out why you're a moron.
pam  
11 Nov 2011 /  #372
havent had time to read posts as have been to0 busy working ( trying to keep roof over head) lol! all i do know is that my lodger ( lokator ) is an extremely good carpenter and his monthly salary in poland is 1500 zlotych. he is in england now working as a gardener and earning 300£ a week. you dont have to do too much maths to work it out...ironically his wife works as a cleaner in a hospital and she earns 1200 zlotych. cant believe difference between the salary of someone who has a trade and someone who doesnt. when i asked him why maybe his wife doesnt try to get maybe a shop job, which i thought would be better, he explained she would only earn maybe 900 zlotych...guess average salary would be about right...
peter_olsztyn  6 | 1082  
11 Nov 2011 /  #373
cant believe difference between the salary of someone who has a trade and someone who doesnt.

We call that a salary compression ;)
handlujzlotem  
22 Dec 2011 /  #374
average salary is circa 3500 pln gross monthly in 2011 - still much too little, taking into consideration that median is even smaller, marketchances.com
ColdSteel  - | 20  
22 Dec 2011 /  #375
when I came to poland first time and asked a polish pal about tipping and his answer was"I am paying my bill thats enough"lol:)

Because it is. Unless it's a luxurious place where it would be mean to not tip. Anyway it's up to you, some people always tip, some never, some only tip if the service is good. In some places I meet with not so good service almost every time, so why should I tip them if they obviously don't give a crap about giving good service? I understand they might just not care, but then I guess they don't expect a tip.
pawian  221 | 25345  
22 Dec 2011 /  #376
some never

I never tip because I don`t frequent premises where tipping is expected. I once worked in a luxurious restaurant and the things I saw there put me off visiting such places.
pam  
22 Dec 2011 /  #377
I never tip because I don`t frequent premises where tipping is expected

i rarely eat out at restaurants, but i always tip if the service is good as i spent 3 years working as a waitress. i used to live off my tips at the time..lol!
Wroclaw  44 | 5359  
22 Dec 2011 /  #378
i used to live off my tips at the time..lol!

i take it you didn't work at Pomeroys in the city. the highest paid waiting staff because noone ever gave tips.
dtaylor5632  18 | 1998  
22 Dec 2011 /  #379
I always tip taxi's, barbers and sometimes tip at a restaurants if the food is good or service is. Generally don't like places where "the tip" is written into the bill as a "service charge". But I'm a pompous ass anyway ;)
Barney  17 | 1672  
22 Dec 2011 /  #380
Generally don't like places where "the tip" is written into the bill as a "service charge". But I'm a pompous ass anyway ;)

9 times out of 10 that goes to the managers not the workers, never pay the service just tip the person serving you.
Tipping is such a minefield I hate it in North America where you have to tip to subsidise the employer or to get service. The only tightwad is the owner who expects others to pay for their employees but thankfully I haven't been for a while. I always tip in restaurants in Europe but never in Bars.
pam  
23 Dec 2011 /  #381
i take it you didn't work at Pomeroys in the city.

never actually heard of pomeroys....i certainly didnt earn mega bucks where i worked, but i was classed as a silver service waitress if you know what that means. basically you know where all the cutlery should be, correctly placed, and you serve the food onto the plates for the customers. am dying to ask you a question about restaurants in poland, but know i will be off topic...:(
Wroclaw  44 | 5359  
23 Dec 2011 /  #382
am dying to ask you a question about restaurants in poland, but know i will be off topic...:(

start a new thread then or ask in random chat.
pam  
23 Dec 2011 /  #383
start a new thread

dont think so,would be too embarrassed to ask this question, which in itself is not embarrassing, but considering i mix with a lot of poles, it would be for me!!

feel free to send a PM
karuindia  
2 May 2012 /  #384
@Torq

Hello man ,

I forgot my password , it took 10 min to figure out to reset the password because in any other sites there will question asking " Did you forget your password? " but in this site there is small question mark " ? " . Anyways ,after two years I am writing this to say , whatever you have advised me here before is word to word is damn true man .

I am now working in Germany , Frankfurt(Oder]).

Thanks for your prompt reply and bitter truth .
pawian  221 | 25345  
16 Jan 2013 /  #385
Average monthly salary in Poland is around 1000 PLN (few hundred bucks).

In 2013, it is about 3700 brutto.

According to the draft of budget Act in the next year, the average salary will be 3713 zł, and the amount of the benefits for the unemployed - nearly 697 zł; the expected rate of unemployment is 13 per cent, per month in 2013 will be paid an average of 365 thousand benefits.

portalsamorzadowy.pl/praca/3713-zl-przecietne-wynagrodzenie-w-2013-r,40115.html
gumishu  15 | 6182  
16 Jan 2013 /  #386
In 2013, it is about 3700 brutto.

how many people do you know who earn this much money
pawian  221 | 25345  
16 Jan 2013 /  #387
Unfortunately, I am too shy to ask them about their earnings. But people who pay me for courses and private tutoring probably make it or even more.

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