Are restaurants secretly overcharging you? Make sure you check your receipt!
- Replies 18
Going out to eat can be quite an expensive endeavour, but sometimes it's worth the splurge – especially when we're catching up with good friends.
After all, good food and conversation are two of the best things in life! And if we want to enjoy a quality meal at our favourite restaurants, we should be prepared to pay a little extra.
However, there's one thing that diners should watch out for when they're perusing restaurant menus and chalking up their orders, and that's sneaky service charges.
Recently, a group of nine dining in Sydney was left feeling 'furious' after being charged almost $75 for a 'mandatory' service fee at popular Italian eatery Bar Totti's in the city’s central business district.
They dined on 13 appetisers, six main dishes, four side dishes, and drinks for a total of $826.75.
An anonymous member of the group said they would have had no issue with paying a bit extra for tipping — not until they saw that they were charged for service and $30 for water!
‘It’s outrageous, it’s basically a mandatory tip. And for what? It was the most basic level of service anyway,’ she said.
‘The service charge makes no sense.’
In hindsight, the woman also slammed restaurant staff who brought over the three 1-litre water bottles and said nothing about additional fees.
‘Very sneaky,’ she said.
Bar Totti’s website displays a message before booking that groups of eight or more will incur a 10% service charge — something that didn’t sit well with the group member.
‘I don’t understand what the service charge is for - what they were doing for us that they weren’t already doing for a group of six or seven? Seems excessive,’ she said.
‘We know restaurants have struggled a lot in the last two years with the pandemic… but being charged an exorbitant amount for service and water with no explanation just doesn’t seem fair on customers.’
Merivale, the group behind Bar Totti’s, have not yet commented on the matter.
Over the past months, we’ve featured other stories of restaurants you’d also call sneaky for their unannounced surcharges.
An Aussie woman was in the same situation as these nine diners last October, having been charged an additional 10% for service (and in a small font!) on her receipt.
Another diner in Brisbane last September was also ‘furious’ over the many fees in fine print they saw on the menu of a restaurant they were eating at.
Perhaps it’s safe to say this is going on a lot more than what the headlines show, right?
So, what exactly do we do to avoid these sneaky little fees, especially at a time when Sunday surcharges are expected to become more common?
Well, check the fine print or ask! As in the cases above, some restaurants place the surcharge notices where they’re hard to spot, which can lead to nasty post-meal surprises.
Be sure to take a few more seconds browsing the menu or your bill to be sure how much money you’re forking out and why. (Maybe even bring a magnifying glass just to let the restaurant staff know you’re on to them… kidding!)
And when checking the fine print fails (like in cases where you ask for water only to find out there’s a fee), be sure to ask if the service is free.
So, have you had experiences like this group of diners? Or maybe you have some other tips on how to spot hidden fees at restaurants?
Tell us in the comments section below!
After all, good food and conversation are two of the best things in life! And if we want to enjoy a quality meal at our favourite restaurants, we should be prepared to pay a little extra.
However, there's one thing that diners should watch out for when they're perusing restaurant menus and chalking up their orders, and that's sneaky service charges.
Recently, a group of nine dining in Sydney was left feeling 'furious' after being charged almost $75 for a 'mandatory' service fee at popular Italian eatery Bar Totti's in the city’s central business district.
They dined on 13 appetisers, six main dishes, four side dishes, and drinks for a total of $826.75.
An anonymous member of the group said they would have had no issue with paying a bit extra for tipping — not until they saw that they were charged for service and $30 for water!
‘It’s outrageous, it’s basically a mandatory tip. And for what? It was the most basic level of service anyway,’ she said.
‘The service charge makes no sense.’
In hindsight, the woman also slammed restaurant staff who brought over the three 1-litre water bottles and said nothing about additional fees.
‘Very sneaky,’ she said.
Bar Totti’s website displays a message before booking that groups of eight or more will incur a 10% service charge — something that didn’t sit well with the group member.
‘I don’t understand what the service charge is for - what they were doing for us that they weren’t already doing for a group of six or seven? Seems excessive,’ she said.
‘We know restaurants have struggled a lot in the last two years with the pandemic… but being charged an exorbitant amount for service and water with no explanation just doesn’t seem fair on customers.’
Merivale, the group behind Bar Totti’s, have not yet commented on the matter.
Over the past months, we’ve featured other stories of restaurants you’d also call sneaky for their unannounced surcharges.
An Aussie woman was in the same situation as these nine diners last October, having been charged an additional 10% for service (and in a small font!) on her receipt.
Another diner in Brisbane last September was also ‘furious’ over the many fees in fine print they saw on the menu of a restaurant they were eating at.
Perhaps it’s safe to say this is going on a lot more than what the headlines show, right?
So, what exactly do we do to avoid these sneaky little fees, especially at a time when Sunday surcharges are expected to become more common?
Key Takeaways
- A group of diners in Sydney were charged almost $75 for a 'mandatory' service fee and $30 for water at a popular Italian restaurant - despite already splurging more than $720 on dinner.
- The friends enjoyed a huge feast at Merivale’s Bar Totti’s in the city's CBD.
- A group member said the hidden service charge 'ruined' their pleasant dining experience.
Be sure to take a few more seconds browsing the menu or your bill to be sure how much money you’re forking out and why. (Maybe even bring a magnifying glass just to let the restaurant staff know you’re on to them… kidding!)
And when checking the fine print fails (like in cases where you ask for water only to find out there’s a fee), be sure to ask if the service is free.
So, have you had experiences like this group of diners? Or maybe you have some other tips on how to spot hidden fees at restaurants?
Tell us in the comments section below!