Walk into a café or restaurant in Vancouver today and brace yourself. Not for a warm welcome, not for enthusiastic service, but for a bleak, transactional encounter. The atmosphere is often dreary, shaped by slow-moving staff, a lack of eye contact, and an unmistakable undertone of fatigue. Smiles are rare. Engagement is minimal. And yet, at the end of this joyless exchange, a glowing payment screen prompts you to tip 10, 15, 20, or even 25 percent. For what, exactly?

Tipping in most parts of the world remains a token of appreciation for exceptional service. In Vancouver, it has devolved into an automatic surcharge, detached from performance, value, or intent. The city’s tipping culture is not just flawed. It is aggressively stacked against the consumer. What was once meant to reward quality now feels like a coerced tax. The hospitality industry has cleverly shifted the burden of decent wages onto customers, many of whom walk away feeling short-changed and resentful.
This is not how it works everywhere. In the United States, tipping is indeed expected and often built into the experience, with most diners leaving 15 to 20 percent. However, the tipping system in the US is tied to a sub-minimum wage for servers, which can be as low as $2.13 per hour in some states. Customers are effectively subsidizing wages directly. It may be a flawed model, but it is at least transparently structured.
Europe’s balanced model of fair wages and modest gratuity
In Europe, by contrast, many countries include service charges directly in the bill, and servers are paid a livable wage. In places like France, Germany, or Italy, tipping is modest and genuinely discretionary. Leaving five to ten percent is seen as a kind gesture, not a societal obligation.
Vancouver has embraced the worst of both worlds. Tipping has become mandatory in attitude if not in name, yet staff are paid the regular provincial minimum wage. There is no clarity, no rationale, and no service performance to justify the gratuity. Diners are being strong-armed into tipping amounts on par with New York or Los Angeles, but without the service standards to back it up.
Overworked and under-supported: Students at the heart of the problem
The uncomfortable truth behind this decline in service culture lies in the workforce itself. A vast number of restaurants and cafés in Vancouver are staffed by international students and part-time workers. These individuals are overwhelmed by high rent, academic pressures, and the brutal economics of survival in one of North America’s most expensive cities. Hospitality is not a passion or a career aspiration. It is a temporary means to an end. With minimal training, little support, and virtually no mentorship, many service staff move through their shifts in autopilot. What results is a hospitality environment that feels cold, robotic, and ultimately uninspiring.
Even the food, however thoughtfully prepared, can arrive at the table feeling joyless under such an atmosphere. A cup of coffee becomes a bitter brew of sorrow, served with a side of apathy and an expectation to tip for the experience. The industry’s heavy reliance on undertrained and exhausted staff may not be the direct fault of the individual worker, but it is absolutely the fault of the industry. It is the result of poor planning, profit-first mentality, and an alarming disinterest in cultivating long-term service excellence. And while the consequences fall onto the customers, the responsibility lies squarely with those who run and structure the system.
A tale of two countries: Hospitality excellence in the UAE
Now contrast this with the service culture in the United Arab Emirates. Whether you are sipping tea for AED 2 at a street corner cafeteria in Dubai or enjoying a world-class meal at Zuma, Cipriani, Gaia, Mina Brasserie or enjoying sheesha and drinks at the Luna Sky Bar in Dubai, the difference is undeniable. In the UAE, service is treated as a profession. Staff are knowledgeable, courteous, alert, and genuinely invested in delivering a memorable experience. They know the menus, anticipate your needs, and carry a sense of pride that elevates even the most casual encounter into something special. From street food vendors to fine-dining waitstaff, the standard is consistently high, and customers are made to feel welcome and respected regardless of how much they spend or tip.
Vancouver, with all its natural beauty, cultural diversity, and culinary potential, should be able to offer a similar standard. Yet the bar here is not simply low. It is practically on the floor. The city’s hospitality sector has embraced a model that rewards mediocrity, accepts indifference, and punishes guests for expecting better.
Asma and Timothy: Two professionals who set the gold standard
Fortunately, there are exceptions. At the Italian Kitchen, Asma, a seasoned professional from Tunisia with experience working in the Arabian Gulf, stands out for her energy, precision, and commitment to excellent service. She brings warmth and attentiveness to every table she serves, reminding us what hospitality should look and feel like.
And then there is Timothy at Shaughnessy Restaurant inside the stunning VanDusen Botanical Gardens. The food and setting are remarkable, but it is Timothy’s service that leaves the strongest impression. He takes time to explain the ingredients, answers questions with care, and even adds a personal touch by sketching a cheerful cartoon chicken on a takeaway box in under ten seconds. It is the kind of moment diners remember long after the meal is done.
Time to raise the bar: Reforming hospitality from within
Why are professionals like Timothy and Asma not being appointed as trainers and mentors? Why is the Hospitality Workers Training Centre not tapping into this talent pool to lead and elevate the city’s service culture? Such individuals are assets. They should be setting the standard, not operating in isolation. Right now, the city’s dining experience is being defined by a revolving door of transient staff, a vast majority of whom have never seen real service excellence in action.
It is not all doom and gloom. Vancouver has everything it needs to become a world-class culinary destination and more. But it cannot achieve that status by continuing to demand inflated tips for indifferent service. The solution lies not only in reforming tipping culture but in rebuilding the entire mindset around hospitality. The industry must stop pretending that underperformance is inevitable and start recognizing that great service is a skill that can be taught, nurtured, and rewarded.
Invest in training, reward excellence, and shift the mindset
Begin by identifying and empowering those who already embody true service excellence. Professionals like Timothy and Asma who deliver not just competence, but care should be placed at the forefront as trainers and mentors. Their example should shape the next generation of service staff across the city. And surely, there are many more like them quietly raising the bar. Until these individuals are given the responsibility to lead, Vancouver will remain a city where diners pay premium prices for lacklustre service, tired expressions, and a system more invested in preserving mediocrity than cultivating mastery. – By MENA Newswire News Desk.