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Paying for the Dinner Party




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Paying Etiquette for Dinner Party

At most dinner parties held at a restaurant, there is the awkward moment when the check arrives.   We are talking about a group of 10 or more  people where separate checks is not an option, the bill is substantial and each  person would prefer not to be the one making the decision on how it should be  paid.  The waiter will pick some unlucky  person to give the check to or just place it in the center of the table.  Now the dreaded  moment comes on determining how to pay the bill. 

dinner partyThere are 3 solutions to paying the bill.  One is to have each person review the  check, determine what they owe and pay that amount, then pass the check to the  next person.  As the group exceeds 5  people, this can be time consuming, some people will want to calculate what  they owe to the exact amount only to forget to include something like the tax  or the tip.  

Option two is to split, one person to take the  responsibility to review the check total, add in the tip and divide by the  number of people attending with an announcement that everyone pays the same  amount.  This is simple and usually used among  friends, especially if the same group meets for dinner often. 

The third option  would be for one person to pick-up the full tab and be done with it.  This only works when this person actually did  the inviting and organizing of the party.    This is usually for a special event like a birthday, anniversary or promotion  celebration. 

There are several things that can make this moment even more  awkward. 

     
  1. A few of the guests have the expensive course with several drinks.
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  3. Not everyone knows each other so it is difficult to know how others feel.
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  5. It’s a dinner with business associates but this was not an actual business dinner.

In any of these cases, it is easy to predict how people can  react.   If the check was evenly split,  some people would refuse to pay more than what they owe or complain about it  later.   And if not evenly split and each  person calculates what they owe, what happens when the total money provided is  less than the total bill?  People should  understand that when you accept an invitation to a dinner party, that it is not  too unusual to pay more than what you actually owe, this is especially true for  something like a birthday party where you should pay extra for the honored guest.

Here are a few guidelines or un-spoken rules that can be followed:

     
  • Split the check evenly when possible.   This is the simplest.
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  • If some people want to calculate their own payment, be patient and if the total received is less then due, look to them first for more money.
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  • Each individual should only order a reasonably priced meal or on par with what others are ordering.   If they do have a more costly meal then the others, they should add extra money in their payment and make this known when they do so.  You can bet others will be paying attention.
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  • If the check comes with a separate bar bill, this can also be split by just the people who had the drinks from the bar.  So the total check is actually split twice, once for the main meal where all contribute and once for the bar tab where only the one’s ordering from the bar contribute.   
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  • Never organize and invite guests to a dinner party you can’t afford

 

  If this dinner is for a special  event like a birthday, anniversary, retirement, or shower party, then  someone other than the celebrated person or persons organized the event.  In this case, this person who invited the  guests should be willing and expect to pay.    This is especially true if not  ordering off of a menu but served what the organizer setup.  The guests should try to donate money to this  person to help offset their expenses but you should not expect it.  You have to plan on going it alone.  This may mean that either you ask family  member or a friend to be a co-host or plan the number of guests, the location  and menu carefully.  The honored guests  should not have to pay.

Then there are the people who are low on cash and must pay by credit card.   This can be handled in two ways.  First just tell the waiter to put your split  on your card.  Second you can collect the  cash from everyone else and use your credit card to pay for the total check,  easier on the waiter.  However your  spouse may wonder why the large charge!

Similar to this is when you have several people with only large bills and there is not enough  change in the cash pile to break the larger bills.  This can be easily handled by going directly  to the casher earlier in the meal, many times a bartender, and getting the  larger bill exchanged for smaller bills.   Don’t make the waitress make an extra trip just to break your large  bill, do it yourself.

The bottom line is to not agonize over the bill, just be  prepared and have a great time.  It can  be hard to put a price on having fun with friends and family.

Other related articles:   The Art of Entertaining    Tips on Entertaining Style


Comments Below

There is 1 comment
Eric
April 11, 2008 - 13:27
Subject: who pays for dinner

Yes, always pay for the person being honored. If there is typically a person that orders the more expensive meal and/or has several expensive drinks, they need to pay extra when the tab is split. If they do not, stop asking them to dinner.

Another issue I have seen is when someone orders way more food then they can eat and then carries half of it home while the check is being split. This is not cool!

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