Job Benefits of a Waiter

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    Salary

    • The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the mean annual salary for a waiter working in the United States was $20,790, as of May 2010. This equates to an hourly pay rate of $9.99. Those waiters among the highest-earning 10 percent earned salaries in excess of $29,980, which translates to a wage of over $14.41 per hour. Most waiters work in full-service restaurants, according to the bureau’s figures, in which the mean yearly wage was $20,600. Individuals working in traveler accommodation – hotels, resorts – earned more, a mean of $24,200, while in limited-service eating places, the wage was $18,680 per year.

    Tips

    • Besides their basic wage, waiters also earn money from customer tips. On average, tipping etiquette sees customers leave 10 to 20 percent of the check as a tip. These either go directly to the waiter who served that particular customer, or are collected into a shared pool which is then distributed evenly among all waiting and other dining room staff, such as busboys and bartenders. Waiters can earn more from tips than they do from their basic salary.

    Flexibility

    • Waiters typically work shifts, corresponding with the busy mealtimes of lunch and dinner, and can work weekends and public holidays. The food service profession also has a large proportion of part-time positions. Waiting therefore offers flexibility to individual workers, allowing them to work around other commitments, such as child care and other employment.

    Other

    • Waiters get to interact with many different kinds of people. Because they earn a large proportion of their income through tips, there is the added incentive that if they do their job well, they will be (hopefully) rewarded well for their efforts by the customer. It is also a profession open to a wide variety of people, as there are no specific education requirements to enter the business, and training is given on the job. Waiters may earn promotions to food service supervisor or manager, which will entail a raise in salary.

    Disadvantages

    • Waiting can be a physically demanding job, with individuals on their feet for much of their shift, and lifting trays of food items. (An alternative way of looking at this is that the profession provides an on-the-job workout.) When working evening shifts, they may not finish until late into the night.

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