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Question of the Day - 02 August 2020

Q:

Since you just responded to a question as to tipping the curbside check-in porter at the airport (QoD 7/12), how much should I tip the person who pushes my wife in a wheelchair from one gate to another?

A:

Wheelchair services at all airports in the U.S. are complimentary. The cost is picked up by the public-service provider (in this case, the airport) to ensure that everyone who comes through its doors has equal access and isn't unfairly penalized for it. Equal access is also a guarantee of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

The wheelchair attendants are usually employees of contractors to the airport authority and are rarely paid much above minimum wage. Even knowing that, it still boils down to what kind of tipper the user of their services is.

Some people believe that since this service is required by law, no tip is necessary, no matter what. Others are extremely charitable by nature and tip generously. The typical range is somewhere in between. (This writer falls in the latter group, so the following numbers might seem benevolent or even lavish to some.)

We’d say it depends on time spent and distance covered. If one attendant simply wheels you off the airplane and hands you off to another at the gate, then from nothing to a buck or two is probably appropriate. Same with being wheeled onto the airplane by a gate attendant.

If the attendant wheels you from the gate to the baggage area in a small airport (such as Reno), $5 is probably plenty. But if it's a big airport and a long way to baggage claim (such as McCarran), $10 might be more appropriate. Also, if a wheelchair attendant has to wait for luggage or for a car at passenger pickup, then time should be factored in. 

For example, if the attendant spends a half-hour with you, you might think that $10-$15 is appropriate, with $20 an hour as the criterion. Keep in mind that the attendant also spends some time getting to and from his/her duty station, so perhaps add another 10 minutes round trip into your calculations. 

This writer’s mother is 93 and still takes at least one airplane trip per year on her own, though she’s wheeled in a chair between the drop-off and pickup curbs and her airline seat. She reports that one time, the wheelchair attendant (in Atlanta) picked her up at the gate, wheeled her to baggage, waited with her till the luggage showed up, retrieved it from the carousel, and helped her to the curb. She looked in her purse and was horrified to see that she had only a $5 bill. When she handed it to the attendant, he acted like it was the most bounteous tip he'd ever received. On the other hand, another time (at JFK), she had only a $10 bill and the attendant who’d spent five minutes with her looked pissed off when she gave it to him.

As always in tipping situations, it depends on the individuals (the tipper and the tipped), the circumstances, the airport, and the service. Whatever you decide, we highly recommend you have plenty of various denomination bills on hand, so you’re prepared for every eventuality.

 

No part of this answer may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the written permission of the publisher.

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Comments

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  • Boomer 55 Aug-02-2020
    Be prepared
    Great answer. You're tipping for their time and efficiency and a necessary service (for me) that airlines don't always deliver on despite guarantees. We particularly agree with last sentence. Prepping tip clip gains higher priority on travel days. And dont forget curbside baggage check person.

  • Tal2 Aug-02-2020
    Tipping Not an Option
    I once pushed my daughter in a wheelchair at DTW from the gate to baggage claim. I can’t imagine not tipping a wheelchair attendant.  It was hard!

  • [email protected] Aug-02-2020
    grateful
    I really respect that they have these people around pushing us in the wheelchairs.I would never be able to make it to my next gate if not for these people.I always expected that they don't get paid much so its not so much they expect a tip,they really just hope for one.I have had a bad experience with escorts as in Chicago they were not waiting for me exiting the plane,and it took forever to get someone to get me,and when they arrived it was like a joke to them.They came with a cart which picked up a few people,and i only had like 20 minutes left to get to my gate,and i kept telling them to call the gate and let them know i'm on my way to wait for me,but the dick i had decided to drop off this elderly couple and even get out of the cart and take them down the stairs for some odd reason,and they had a two hour layover anyway,and here i am with 20 minutes,needless to say i missed my flight and they still didn't really care.So here i am stranded and had to be kept overnight,united,no more

  • O2bnVegas Aug-02-2020
    time, service, attitude
    Excellent answer by LVA as usual.  
    
    [email protected] you had the worst of experiences.  Had you requested a wheelchair escort but instead got the multi-person shuttle?  Inexcusable.  Hope you were able to write to airport management about this service failure, assuming they are the ones with jurisdiction over service quality and not the airline. 
    

  • rokgpsman Aug-02-2020
    Wheelchair assistance
    Everyone's situation is a little different when it comes to tipping, so it's difficult to give a one-size-fits-all instruction about it. A lot of the service workers feel that if you can afford the trip you're taking then you can afford giving reasonable tips for service they provide. What I try to do is think about what I'd expect as a tip if I was the one pushing that wheelchair or cleaning up the hotel room or helping with the luggage, etc. Most people wouldn't want to push a stranger halfway across the airport or clean up a hotel bedroom and bathroom to earn $2, that's measly for the work performed. We should be fair about paying for service that helps us. If you don't want to tip or think you can't afford to then don't utilize the service, do it yourself or have friends help you. It would be nice if service workers were paid $15 or more per hour and no tipping was allowed. But we don't have that system, they get paid a low base amount with the expectation of reasonable tips.

  • Dave in Seattle. Aug-02-2020
    Tip cash.
    Don't mess around with $1 bills! Get TWO'S.