According to a report by Público, based on data requested from the Tax and Customs Authority (AT), in 2023, the income obtained by workers through tips was €121.6 million, a value much higher than that seen, for example, in 2015 (€59.6 million). The numbers also show that in one year, from 2022 to 2023, tips increased by 16%, from €105 million to the €121.6 million mentioned.
As the publication reminds us, tips are classified under tax legislation as “gratifications” and are considered income from salaried work (like a salary), and must be declared to the State by workers when submitting their annual Income Tax declaration. However, unlike salaries, to which the progressive rates of income brackets are applied, they are taxed at an autonomous rate of 10%, writes Público.
The reality is, however, different, as explained by lawyers Joana Lobato Heitor and Bárbara Miragaia, from the tax department of MFA Legal: “Despite the declaratory obligation that arises from the letter of the law for this type of worker, there is a widespread awareness that, in most situations, these values are not declared to the Tax Authorities”.
Tipping in North America has become ridiculous concerning both the percentage, as high sometimes as 18%, and the demand. People/ servers forget that a tip is given at the disgression of the customer, depending on the service.
By M. Warners from Other on 14 Oct 2024, 18:31
Maybe more tips because more tourists. I moved from the busy tourist town Lagos in the Algarve to a place with very little tourists Leiria.
The tips are utterly horrendous.. never seen such pathetic tipping in all my 20 years in hospitality
By Bradley Charles Hardaker from Lisbon on 15 Oct 2024, 10:17
What people and especially the tax authorities and the law makers seems to conveniently forget, is that the people doing the tipping, already paid income taxes on. Why tipping is supposed to be taxed, even at 10%, is theft by the tax authorities!
By NN from Beiras on 15 Oct 2024, 10:39
Thanks 'merica!
By Chris from Lisbon on 15 Oct 2024, 11:39
I am a Portuguese citizen, I was extremely dissatisfied during my last visit August 2024 to Porto & Lisbon. It s obvious to me they don't want visitors any more, we were forced to pay more then the locals even after I presented my citizen card. The attitude was your Canadian you have to pay more. We were a group of and will now never return!!! It's disgusting the gouging that is going on. Very bad experience for me and my guests. By the way I'm also very fluent in Portuguese.
By Tony Mota from Other on 15 Oct 2024, 15:43
So you have a problem, with showing your satisfaction with a tip?
If I find the service was good and the server was helpful, I leave a tip.
It is optional.
The tipping in the states is getting out of hand.
I am here now and I see on bills suggested tip 23 to 25%.
Ridiculous, why not have the server sit at the table and I will buy a meal.
By J from Algarve on 15 Oct 2024, 16:48
Chris, isn't the money you spend on virtually everything taxed again (IVA-sales tax) unless it is for resale? Even services you buy, like having a carpenter is taxed unless you do it under the table. Please can you explain to me how this is different?
By Pegalita from Madeira on 16 Oct 2024, 08:09
My apologies, my previous comment should have been directed to NN.
By pegalita from Madeira on 16 Oct 2024, 08:11
This article simply refers an increase in tipping. Conspicuously absent from it is the consideration of whether is portuguese tipping more or clueless tourists who don't know it is a silly practice in Portugal that should be nipped in the bud.
From 2015 to 2023 tourism had an immense growth and I suspect this is why tipping is suddenly a thing. That it is only taxed at 10% is again ridiculous, standard IRS rates should apply as it is income as any other.
By André from Porto on 16 Oct 2024, 12:09
In the usa, the tip combined with a low salary, which is below minimum wage, tipping is needed to help their salaries to reach minimum wage.
By Brenda Reece from USA on 17 Oct 2024, 11:55