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Tipping in Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam Guide

You are at a beachside warung in Bali. The bill is 150,000 rupiah. You have no idea if 10,000 or 50,000 is the right tip. In Southeast Asia, the answer changes every time you cross a border.

121 million visitors. 7 countries. Zero consensus on tipping.

Southeast Asia welcomed 121.3 million international visitors in 2024, according to the United Nations World Tourism Organization. Thailand alone drew 35.5 million. Vietnam grew 39.5% year-over-year. Indonesia pulled 13.9 million — many of them headed straight to Bali.

Every one of those travelers faced the same question at some point: do I tip here? The answer depends entirely on which border you last crossed. Singapore’s 10% service charge means tipping is unnecessary and sometimes unwelcome. Bali’s tourist economy expects 5-10% on top. Vietnam’s street food stalls would find a tip confusing. Cambodia’s dual-currency system adds another layer of complexity.

121.3Minternational visitors to Southeast Asia in 2024 (UNWTO)
7distinct tipping cultures across the region
39.5%year-over-year growth in Vietnam arrivals (2024)

This guide covers the 7 countries Western travelers visit most in Southeast Asia: Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, and Cambodia. Country by country, service by service, with local currency amounts. For our full global reference, see the 2026 tipping chart.

Source: UNWTO Southeast Asia Tourism Performance 2024 Recap

Why tipping varies so dramatically across borders

In 1993, Cornell professor Michael Lynn, along with George Zinkhan and Judy Harris, published a landmark study in the Journal of Consumer Research examining tipping customs across 30 countries. They identified 33 different service professions that receive tips — but the number of tipped professions varied enormously from nation to nation. The United States tipped the most professions. Many Asian countries tipped the fewest.

Lynn and his co-authors theorized that national values — particularly individualism versus collectivism — predict tipping behavior. Individualist cultures (the US, UK, Canada) developed robust tipping norms because tipping rewards individual performance. Collectivist cultures (much of Southeast Asia) developed fewer because group harmony matters more than singling out individual effort.

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Cross-country differences in the prevalence of tipping reflect cross-country differences in values. The number of tipped professions in a country is positively related to the country's level of individualism.

Michael Lynn, George Zinkhan & Judy Harris, Journal of Consumer Research (1993)

Geert Hofstede’s cultural dimensions research confirms this pattern for Southeast Asia. Indonesia scores just 14 out of 100 on individualism — one of the most collectivist nations on earth. Thailand scores 20. Vietnam is similarly low. These are societies where social harmony, hierarchy, and group identity take precedence over individual recognition. Tipping, as Americans practice it, is fundamentally an individualist institution transplanted into collectivist soil. Japan takes this cultural logic to its extreme — our Japan tipping guide explains why leaving money on the table there is genuinely offensive.

This doesn’t mean Southeast Asians don’t tip. It means the reasons for tipping differ. In a 2020 study published in the Journal of Travel Research, Lynn and Zachary Brewster found that US travelers abroad do adjust their tipping to local norms — but imperfectly. Travelers with strong pro-tipping attitudes tipped even in countries where it wasn’t customary, creating an awkward mismatch between intention and local expectation. For a broader map of where tipping is offensive, see our global customs guide.

Sources: Lynn, Zinkhan & Harris, “Consumer Tipping: A Cross-Country Study,” Journal of Consumer Research (1993); Hofstede, Culture’s Consequences, Sage Publications (2001); Lynn & Brewster, “The Tipping Behavior and Motives of US Travelers Abroad,” Journal of Travel Research (2020)

The Southeast Asian tipping spectrum

Southeast Asia spans the full range from “tipping is unnecessary” to “tips are genuinely expected in tourist areas.” Here is where each country falls, at a glance.

SingaporeNot expected

10% service charge is standard at restaurants. Additional tipping is unnecessary and sometimes declined. Hawker centres: no tip.

MalaysiaNot expected

10% service charge common at restaurants. Tipping is not the norm. Rounding up the bill is the most you would do.

VietnamAppreciated, not expected

No tipping tradition. Tourist areas are more accustomed to it. 5-10% at upscale restaurants. Street food: never.

CambodiaAppreciated, not expected

Dual-currency system (USD + riel). 10-15% at restaurants in tourist areas. Tips mean a lot given low wages.

ThailandEmerging norm

Many restaurants add 10% service charge. Without it, 10-15% is common at tourist-facing restaurants. Street food: round up or leave 20 THB.

PhilippinesEmerging norm

10-12.5% service charge at many restaurants. Without it, 10% is standard. American influence is strong.

Indonesia (Bali)Expected in tourist areas

Tourist Bali expects 5-10% on top of any service charge. Many restaurants add 5-10% service charge plus 11% tax. Check the bill first.

Sources: Lynn & Lynn, “National Values and Tipping Customs,” Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research (2004); Azar, “The Social Norm of Tipping: A Review,” Journal of Applied Social Psychology (2007)

Thailand: the 10% service charge question

Thailand welcomed 35.5 million visitors in 2024 — more than any other Southeast Asian country. With that volume comes a tipping culture that has evolved significantly from local norms. The first thing to check: does the bill already include a 10% service charge?

Most mid-range and upscale Thai restaurants add a 10% service charge automatically. When you see it on the bill, an additional tip is not expected. However, there is ongoing debate about whether the service charge actually reaches staff. In many cases, it goes to the restaurant’s general revenue, not to your specific server.

Thailand tipping amounts

Restaurant (no service charge)10-15% or round up
Restaurant (10% service charge included)No additional tip needed
Street food / casual20 THB ($0.55) or round up
Spa / massage50-100 THB ($1.40-$2.80)
Hotel porter20-50 THB per bag
Taxi / tuk-tukRound up to nearest 10 THB
Tour guide (full day)300-500 THB ($8-$14)

The street food rule: At Bangkok’s legendary street food stalls, Chiang Mai night markets, or any casual local eatery, Thais do not tip. Leaving 20 THB (about $0.55) is a kind gesture but never expected. The food is already priced to be complete.

Sources: Lynn & Brewster, “The Tipping Behavior and Motives of US Travelers Abroad,” Journal of Travel Research (2020); Azar, “The Social Norm of Tipping: A Review,” Journal of Applied Social Psychology (2007)

Indonesia: Bali rules versus the rest

Indonesia is two tipping cultures in one country. Tourist Bali has developed robust tipping expectations shaped by decades of Western visitors. The rest of Indonesia — Jakarta, Yogyakarta, Sumatra — operates closer to traditional norms where tipping is a bonus, not a baseline.

The complication: many Bali restaurants include both a service charge (5-10%) and a government tax (11%), often written as ”++.” That means your 150,000 IDR meal might become 181,500 IDR before you even consider a tip. Always check the bill. If you see “service charge” or “SC” on the receipt, an additional tip is not necessary — though 10,000-20,000 IDR for exceptional service is always welcome.

Indonesia tipping amounts

Restaurant (no service charge)5-10% of bill
Restaurant (service charge included)IDR 10,000-20,000 for great service
Warung / local eateryRound up or IDR 5,000-10,000
Spa / massage (Bali)10-15% or IDR 50,000-100,000
Hotel porterIDR 10,000-20,000 per bag
Private driver (full day)IDR 50,000-100,000 ($3-$6)
Tour guide (full day)IDR 100,000-200,000 ($6-$12)

One essential detail: always tip in Indonesian rupiah, not US dollars. Service workers cannot easily exchange foreign currency, and the conversion loss eats into the gesture. Keep a supply of IDR 10,000 and 20,000 notes — they are the tipping denominations of Bali.

The ”++” on your bill: Indonesian restaurant menus often display prices followed by ”++.” The first ”+” is the service charge (5-10%). The second ”+” is government tax (11%). A menu price of IDR 100,000++ means you will pay IDR 116,000-121,000. Check before adding more.

Source: Lynn & Lynn, “National Values and Tipping Customs,” Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research (2004)

Vietnam: gratitude without the gratuity

Vietnam does not have a traditional tipping culture. Service workers receive wages and do not rely on tips for survival — a stark contrast to the US model. A polite “cam on” (thank you) carries genuine weight.

That said, tipping has become more common in tourist centers like Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Da Nang as Western visitors bring their habits. The key distinction: upscale restaurants in tourist areas are accustomed to 5-10% tips. Local eateries and street food stalls are not. Tipping at a pho stand on a Hanoi sidewalk would be unusual and potentially confusing.

Vietnam tipping amounts

Upscale restaurant5-10% if no service charge
Mid-range restaurantRound up or VND 20,000-50,000
Street food / pho standNot expected
Cafe / coffee shopRound up or VND 10,000-20,000
Spa / massageVND 50,000-100,000 ($2-$4)
Tour guide (full day)VND 200,000-300,000 ($8-$12)
Hotel housekeepingVND 20,000-50,000 per day

Always tip in Vietnamese dong. Workers cannot easily exchange USD or other currencies. Keep small notes — VND 10,000 (about $0.40), VND 20,000 ($0.80), and VND 50,000 ($2) — ready in your pocket.

Source: Azar, “The Social Norm of Tipping: Does it Improve Social Welfare?,” Journal of Economics (2005)

Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, and Cambodia

Philippines: the American influence

The Philippines has stronger tipping norms than most of Southeast Asia, partly due to historical American cultural influence. Many restaurants include a 10-12.5% service charge. Without one, 10% is standard. Tipping 50-100 PHP ($0.85-$1.70) at casual restaurants is appreciated. At taxi rides, rounding up or adding 20-50 PHP is typical.

Always tip in Philippine pesos (PHP). Service workers deal exclusively in local currency.

Malaysia: round up and move on

Malaysia is straightforward. Many restaurants add a 10% service charge plus 8% SST (Sales and Services Tax). When the service charge is included, no additional tip is expected. Without it, rounding up the bill is the local norm. Nobody will think less of you for not tipping, and nobody will chase you down for leaving change on the table.

Singapore: the anti-tipping city

Singapore has one of the clearest no-tip cultures in the world. Restaurants add a 10% service charge plus 9% GST — together making the ”++” you see on menus. Additional tipping is unnecessary and occasionally perceived as patronizing. At hawker centres — Singapore’s famous open-air food courts — tipping does not happen. Self-service etiquette applies.

10%+9%Singapore’s restaurant bills include 10% service charge + 9% GST, noted as ”++” on menus. No additional tip needed.

Cambodia: where tips change lives

Cambodia operates on a dual-currency system: US dollars for larger amounts, Cambodian riel (KHR) for smaller ones. One US dollar equals roughly 4,000 KHR. At restaurants in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, 10-15% is appreciated. For casual meals, $1-2 USD or KHR 5,000-10,000 is generous.

Context matters here. Cambodia has the lowest average wages in mainland Southeast Asia. A tip that feels small to a Western traveler can represent a meaningful portion of a service worker’s daily income. Even small amounts — KHR 5,000 (about $1.25) — are received with genuine gratitude. For similar dynamics in the Arab world, see our Middle East tipping guide.

Sources: Lynn, Zinkhan & Harris, “Consumer Tipping: A Cross-Country Study,” Journal of Consumer Research (1993); Hofstede, Culture’s Consequences, Sage Publications (2001)

Quick reference: tipping across all 7 countries

This table shows what to do at a sit-down restaurant in each country. Print it, screenshot it, or bookmark it.

CountryRestaurant tipService charge?
Thailand10-15% (no SC) or round up10% common
Indonesia5-10% (no SC)5-10% + 11% tax
Vietnam5-10% at upscale onlyRare
Philippines10% (no SC)10-12.5% common
MalaysiaRound up only10% + 8% SST
SingaporeNot expected10% + 9% GST
Cambodia10-15% in tourist areasOccasional

5 common tipping mistakes in Southeast Asia

Ofer Azar, a behavioral economist at Ben-Gurion University, argued in his 2007 review in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology that tipping is a social norm maintained by conformity pressure — not rational calculation. Travelers make mistakes when they apply the norms of their home country to a foreign context. Here are the most common ones.

1

Tipping on top of a service charge

Check the bill before reaching for your wallet. The "++" notation (service charge + tax) means the tip is already built in. Adding 15% on top of a 10% service charge is not generous -- it is a misunderstanding.

2

Tipping in US dollars

Service workers in Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia deal in local currency. A $5 bill might seem convenient but creates a conversion problem for the recipient. Tip in local currency -- always.

3

Tipping at street food stalls

Across all 7 countries, street food and hawker-style dining does not involve tipping. The price is the price. Adding a tip at a Bangkok noodle cart or a Saigon banh mi stand can create confusion.

4

Applying one country's norms to another

Lynn and Brewster's 2020 research showed that travelers adjust tipping to local norms -- but imperfectly. The biggest error is treating all of Southeast Asia as one zone. Singapore and Bali could not be more different.

5

Forgetting small denominations

Break larger notes early. You need THB 20 notes in Thailand, IDR 10,000 in Indonesia, VND 10,000 in Vietnam. ATMs dispense large bills. Ask your hotel or a convenience store for change.

Sources: Azar, “The Social Norm of Tipping: A Review,” Journal of Applied Social Psychology (2007); Lynn & Brewster, “The Tipping Behavior and Motives of US Travelers Abroad,” Journal of Travel Research (2020)

Splitting the bill abroad: when currencies collide

Group dining in Southeast Asia introduces a specific complication: everyone at the table may have different assumptions about tipping. The Australian thinks 10% is excessive. The American thinks 15% is the floor. The Brit is looking for the service charge line. Meanwhile, the bill is in Thai baht and nobody has exact change.

This is the exact scenario Michael Lynn’s cross-country research identified as a friction point. When groups contain members from different tipping cultures, the group must negotiate a norm in real time — at the table, with the server waiting. The result is usually either over-tipping (the American wins) or under-tipping (everyone defers to the lowest common denominator).

The research-backed approach: agree on the local norm before the meal. In Singapore, that means no tip. In tourist Bali, 5-10% on the pre-tax subtotal. In Vietnam, it depends on the restaurant type. Having the conversation before the check arrives eliminates the awkward negotiation entirely. For a deeper look at how currency differences affect group splits, see our guide to cross-border dining.

How splitty handles Southeast Asian tips

Every research finding in this guide points to the same problem: tip calculations vary by country, currency, and context. Doing them manually in a group setting — especially after converting from your home currency — compounds the errors.

7 countries with different tipping normsSet the local tip percentage once — splitty applies it proportionally to each person’s share
Service charges already included on many billsScan the receipt — splitty reads the service charge line and adjusts the tip field accordingly
Multi-nationality groups disagree on tip amountsOne person sets the agreed percentage. Everyone sees their exact share. No negotiation.
Lynn’s research: travelers adjust to local norms imperfectlyPer-person totals in local currency eliminate mental conversion errors

Different currencies. Different customs. One fair split.

splitty handles multi-currency tips so your group gets it right in every country.

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