Calculate a tipped employee's total pay including hourly wages, tips received, and tip-outs to servers, bussers, and bartenders.
Tipped employees in restaurants and bars earn compensation from two distinct streams: their base hourly wage and the tips they receive from guests. However, calculating actual take-home pay requires accounting for tip-outs — the portion of tips shared with bussers, food runners, bartenders, and other support staff.
Understanding total pay is essential for both employees budgeting their income and managers ensuring compliance with federal and state minimum wage laws. Under the FLSA, tipped employees must earn at least the federal minimum wage when base pay and tips are combined; if they don't, the employer must make up the difference.
This calculator helps you compute a tipped employee's total compensation by combining hourly wages with tips received, then subtracting any tip-out amounts. Use it to verify that your tipped staff are meeting minimum wage thresholds and to help employees understand their true earnings per shift.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate tipped employee total pay numbers to maintain profitability while delivering exceptional guest experiences. Return to this tool whenever menu prices, occupancy rates, or staffing levels shift to keep your operations on track.
Tracking total pay for tipped employees ensures compliance with minimum wage laws, helps servers and bartenders understand their real earnings, and gives managers visibility into labor costs that include variable tip income. It's also essential for shift-level profitability analysis. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Total Pay = (Hourly Wage × Hours Worked) + Tips Received − Tip-Outs Effective Hourly Rate = Total Pay ÷ Hours Worked
Result: $573.90 total | $19.13/hr effective
Base pay is $2.13 × 30 = $63.90. Adding $600 in tips gives $663.90, then subtracting $90 in tip-outs yields $573.90 total. The effective hourly rate is $573.90 ÷ 30 = $19.13/hr, well above the federal minimum wage.
The tipped employee compensation model is unique in the hospitality industry. Employers pay a lower base wage (the tipped minimum wage) with the expectation that tips will bring total compensation above the standard minimum wage. This system requires careful tracking to ensure legal compliance.
Most restaurants use one of two tip-out models: percentage-of-tips or percentage-of-sales. Under percentage-of-tips, a server might share 20–30% of total tips among support staff. Under percentage-of-sales, servers tip out a fixed percentage (e.g., 3–5% of food sales) regardless of actual tip amounts. The sales-based model is more predictable but can be challenging when guests tip poorly.
Managers should audit effective hourly rates weekly to confirm all tipped employees clear the applicable minimum wage threshold. Document tip-out policies in writing, distribute them during onboarding, and update them whenever percentages change. Maintain records of all tips reported for at least three years as required by the FLSA.
The federal tipped minimum wage is $2.13/hour, but many states set higher floors. Some states like California, Washington, and Oregon require the full state minimum wage before tips. Always check your state and local laws.
A tip-out is the portion of a tipped employee's tips shared with other staff who support service, such as bussers, food runners, bartenders, and hosts. Tip-out amounts are typically calculated as a percentage of tips or sales.
Tip pooling and tip-out arrangements are legal under federal law if they involve customarily tipped employees. Employers cannot require tips to be shared with managers or non-service employees in most jurisdictions. Policies must be clearly communicated.
Under federal law, if a tipped employee's combined base wage and tips don't reach the full federal minimum wage ($7.25/hr), the employer must pay the difference. This is known as the tip credit provision.
Credit card tips are typically distributed at the end of the shift or during regular payroll. Employers may deduct the credit card processing fee associated with the tip amount in some states, but this varies by jurisdiction.
Overtime for tipped employees is calculated on the full minimum wage (not the tipped wage). If the regular rate including tips exceeds minimum wage, overtime is 1.5× that higher regular rate. Consult your state labor department for specifics.