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Tipping in the Middle East: UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt & Beyond

You're at a Dubai restaurant. The bill already includes a 10% service charge. Your American instincts say add 18% on top. The waiter looks confused. Welcome to the Middle East, where tipping has a different name, a different history, and very different rules.

Baksheesh is not a tip

The word baksheesh comes from the Persian bakshidan, meaning “to give.” It appears in English as early as 1625 in Samuel Purchas’s travel writings. But calling it a “tip” misses the point entirely. Anthropologist Marcel Mauss, in his foundational 1925 work The Gift, described how gift-giving creates three obligations: to give, to receive, and to reciprocate. Baksheesh operates on all three levels simultaneously.

In some contexts, baksheesh is a gratuity for service. In others, it’s charitable giving. In still others, it edges toward facilitation payment. Economist Ofer Azar, in his 2007 taxonomy published in the Journal of Socio-Economics, classified tipping into six categories: reward-tipping, price-tipping, tipping-in-advance, bribery-tipping, holiday-tipping, and gift-tipping. Baksheesh can be all six at once, depending on the country and context.

Gratitude

A thank-you for good service, closest to the Western concept of tipping. Common in UAE and Qatar restaurants.

Charity

An act of generosity rooted in Islamic values of zakat (almsgiving). Small amounts given to those in need.

Facilitation

A small payment to expedite service or access. Common in Egypt. The line between tip and incentive blurs.

Social obligation

Reciprocity embedded in hospitality culture. Refusing to give or receive can be a social misstep.

This layered meaning is why Western travelers get confused. You’re applying one definition to a word that carries four. If you’re visiting from a country where tipping is straightforward — or nonexistent — our guide to where tipping is offensive or expected provides the global context.

Sources: Azar, “Why Pay Extra?” Journal of Socio-Economics, 2007; Mauss, The Gift, 1925

Why the Middle East tips differently

Michael Lynn, George Zinkhan, and Judy Harris examined tipping customs across 30 countries in their landmark 1993 study published in the Journal of Consumer Marketing. Their finding: tipping prevalence correlates with cultural dimensions like individualism and power distance. Countries that accept hierarchical power differences tend to have more tipped professions.

The Middle East sits in a unique position. Geert Hofstede’s cultural dimensions research scores Saudi Arabia at 25 on individualism (deeply collectivist) and Jordan at 30. Compare that to the United States at 91. In collectivist cultures, generosity toward guests isn’t an optional add-on. It’s a core social obligation.

25Saudi Arabia’s individualism score (US: 91)
80Arab world power distance score (US: 40)
6Azar’s categories of tipping behavior
33service professions tipped across 30 nations (Lynn 1993)

Lynn and Brewster’s 2020 study in the Journal of Travel Research found that American tourists do partially adjust their tipping to host-nation norms. But the adjustment is incomplete. Travelers tip less in low-tipping countries than at home, but still tip significantly more than locals do. This over-tipping creates awkwardness in the Middle East, where generosity carries specific social meaning. For a broader look at how US tipping habits clash with international norms, see our guide for international visitors to the US.

”The institution of tipping is economically inefficient — it creates uncertainty, inequality, and social discomfort. Yet it persists in some countries because of path dependency and cultural inertia.”

Ofer Azar, “The Social Norm of Tipping: A Review,” Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 2007

Sources: Lynn, Zinkhan & Harris, Journal of Consumer Marketing, 1993; Lynn & Brewster, Journal of Travel Research, 2020; Hofstede, Culture’s Consequences, 2001

United Arab Emirates: The service charge maze

Dubai and Abu Dhabi present the most confusing tipping landscape in the Middle East for Western travelers. The reason: mandatory service charges that may or may not reach your server.

Dubai mandates a 10% service charge on restaurant and hotel bills. Hotels add a 7% municipality fee, 5% VAT, and a Tourism Dirham Fee of AED 7-20 per room per night. Combined, these charges inflate hotel bills by 25-30% beyond the listed price. At restaurants, the 10% service charge appears on every bill, but it goes to the establishment, not necessarily to your waiter.

UAE Tipping Guide

Restaurants (service charge included)5-10% extra
Restaurants (no service charge)15-20%
Hotel porterAED 5-10 per bag
HousekeepingAED 10-20 per day
TaxiRound up fare
Spa / salon10-15%
Tour guide / driver10% of service
Valet parkingAED 5-10

The critical question: Always check your bill for the service charge line. If 10% is already included, an additional 5-10% for exceptional service is generous. If it’s not included, 15-20% is appropriate. Many service workers in the UAE are expats with lower base wages who rely on direct tips. For the complete global reference, our 2026 tipping chart covers percentages across every service type.

Source: UAE Government Portal, u.ae, “Taxes in Tourist Facilities,” 2024

Egypt: Where baksheesh is the economy

Egypt has the most extensive baksheesh culture in the Middle East. It’s not an option. It’s the operating system.

The median salary in Egypt’s hospitality sector is 5,510 EGP per month (roughly $115 USD at 2024 exchange rates). Following the Egyptian pound’s devaluation in 2022-2024, purchasing power dropped sharply while the cost of living rose. For many service workers, tips aren’t a bonus. They’re the majority of take-home income.

This economic reality shapes everything. You’ll encounter baksheesh expectations at restaurants, hotels, historical sites, bathrooms, parking lots, and from anyone who provides even the smallest service. It can feel relentless to Western travelers, but understanding the economics reframes the experience: these small payments are a functioning wage system.

Egypt Tipping Guide

Restaurants10-15%
Hotel porterEGP 20-50 per bag
HousekeepingEGP 20-50 per day
Tour guideEGP 100-200 per day
TaxiRound up 10%
Bathroom attendantEGP 5-10
Site guards / helpersEGP 10-20
Felucca boat captainEGP 50-100

Local currency matters: Always tip in Egyptian pounds (EGP), not US dollars. Workers need currency they can use immediately without paying exchange fees. Keep small bills (EGP 5, 10, 20, 50) on hand throughout the day.

Source: SalaryExplorer, “Food/Hospitality/Tourism Average Salaries in Egypt,” 2024

Saudi Arabia: Generous but not mandatory

Saudi Arabia’s tipping culture sits between the UAE’s service-charge system and Egypt’s economy-wide baksheesh. Tips are appreciated, not demanded. The kingdom’s economy doesn’t create the same wage dependency as Egypt, but service workers — many of whom are international workers — still welcome tips for good service.

With Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 pushing tourism development, more Western-facing service expectations are emerging. But the underlying culture remains collectivist: Hofstede scores Saudi Arabia at 25 on individualism, meaning generosity is communal, not transactional.

Saudi Arabia Tipping Guide

Restaurants (service charge included)5-10% extra
Restaurants (no service charge)10-15%
Hotel porterSAR 5-10 per bag
HousekeepingSAR 10-20 per day
Taxi / rideshareRound up fare
Tour guideSAR 50-100 per day

Sources: Hofstede, Culture’s Consequences, 2001; Lonely Planet, “Tipping in the Middle East,” 2024

Qatar, Jordan, and Oman

The remaining Gulf and Levantine states each have their own tipping personality. What they share: moderate expectations, service charges at upscale venues, and a cultural backdrop where hospitality runs deep.

Qatar
10-15%service charge often included

Many high-end Doha restaurants include a 10-15% service charge. If it’s there, an extra 5-10% is generous. If not, tip 10-15%. Hotel porters: QAR 10-20 per bag. Service workers earn stable salaries, so tips are a bonus, not a necessity. Always tip in Qatari Riyals.

Jordan
10%hospitality culture (karam)

Anthropologist Andrew Shryock documented how Jordanian hospitality (karam) creates moral obligations around giving and receiving. Tip 10% at restaurants. Round up for taxis. Tour guides at Petra and Wadi Rum: $25-35 per day. The Bedouin tradition means hosts want to be generous to you — reciprocate appropriately.

Oman
5-10%modest, check for service charge

Oman has the most relaxed tipping expectations in the Gulf. 5-10% at restaurants is appropriate. Hotel bills usually include service already. Check before adding more. Locals don’t tip heavily, and following their lead is perfectly fine.

Source: Shryock, “The New Jordanian Hospitality,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 2004

Quick reference: Middle East at a glance

One table. Every country. Clip and save.

CountryRestaurantKey Rule
UAE (Dubai)5-15%Check for 10% service charge first
UAE (Abu Dhabi)10-15%Similar to Dubai, fewer mandatory charges
Egypt10-15%Baksheesh expected everywhere, carry small bills
Saudi Arabia10-15%Appreciated but not mandatory
Qatar10-15%Service charge common at high-end venues
Jordan10%Hospitality culture, round up for taxis
Oman5-10%Most relaxed in the Gulf

5 mistakes Western travelers make

Lynn and Brewster’s 2020 research confirmed what hospitality workers across the Middle East already knew: American travelers over-tip, under-tip, and mis-tip in predictable ways. Here are the patterns to avoid.

1

Double-tipping in Dubai

Adding 18% on top of a 10% service charge. Check the bill first. The service charge line is often buried between VAT and municipality fee.

2

Tipping in US dollars

Workers need local currency. Exchanging foreign bills costs them money. Carry small denominations of dirhams, riyals, or pounds.

3

Refusing baksheesh in Egypt

Declining all small requests for tips signals unfamiliarity, not frugality. Budget EGP 100-200 per day for incidental baksheesh.

4

Tipping ostentatiously

In collectivist cultures, flashy tipping can embarrass the recipient. Discretion matters. Hand tips directly, not on the table.

5

Ignoring Ramadan etiquette

During Ramadan, tipping takes on charitable significance. Being generous during the holy month carries extra cultural weight.

Source: Lynn & Brewster, “Tipping Behavior of US Travelers Abroad,” Journal of Travel Research, 2020

The hospitality paradox

Here’s what makes tipping in the Middle East genuinely different from tipping in New York or London: the cultural framework isn’t transactional. It’s relational.

Marcel Mauss’s theory of gift exchange identified three obligations: to give, to receive, and to reciprocate. In the Middle East, hospitality follows this exact pattern. A Jordanian host offers coffee and food because karam demands it. The guest accepts because refusing dishonors the host. And the guest reciprocates through gratitude, future hospitality, or — in modern commercial settings — a tip.

Andrew Shryock’s 2004 ethnographic research in Jordan documented how this plays out: Bedouin hospitality is “a complex blend of reciprocity, protection, and coercive extraction.” The host is morally, socially, and religiously bound to be generous. The guest is equally bound to honor that generosity. Tipping, in this framework, isn’t paying for service. It’s completing a social circuit.

”Hospitality’s combination of reciprocity and realm, morality and politics, generosity and mastery over space and people defines the social world in ways that purely economic models cannot capture.”

Andrew Shryock, “The New Jordanian Hospitality,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 2004

This is why an Egyptian tour guide who receives no baksheesh doesn’t just lose income — the social contract is broken. And it’s why an American tipping 30% in Oman doesn’t signal generosity — it signals misunderstanding. The amount matters less than the gesture. And the gesture must fit the culture. For similar dynamics in Asian hospitality traditions, see our guide to tipping in Japan and our Southeast Asia tipping guide.

Sources: Mauss, The Gift, 1925; Shryock, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 2004

How research shaped the design

Every finding above informed how splitty handles international group dining:

Tipping norms vary 0-20% across Middle Eastern countriesAdjustable tip percentage matches local customs in any country
Service charges are often hidden in Dubai billsReceipt scanning captures service charge lines so you don’t double-tip
Groups of travelers over-tip by 15-20% abroad (Lynn & Brewster 2020)Per-person totals with preset tip prevent collective over-tipping
Collectivist cultures value discretion over displayPrivate item assignment — no public negotiation at the table

Frequently asked questions

Do you tip in Dubai if service charge is included?

Dubai restaurants typically include a mandatory 10% service charge. An additional tip of 5-10% is appreciated for excellent service but not required. Check your bill for the service charge line before deciding.

What is baksheesh in the Middle East?

Baksheesh is a Persian-origin term meaning a small payment for services rendered. In the Middle East it encompasses tipping, charitable giving, and social obligation. In Egypt it functions as an essential economic supplement, while in the Gulf states it is more of a discretionary gesture of appreciation.

How much should you tip in Egypt?

Tip 10-15% at restaurants if no service charge is included. For small services like porters or bathroom attendants, 10-20 EGP is standard. Tour guides typically receive 100-200 EGP per day. Baksheesh is deeply embedded in Egyptian culture and supplements low base wages.

Is tipping expected in Saudi Arabia?

Tipping in Saudi Arabia is appreciated but not as deeply ingrained as in Egypt. Tip 10-15% at restaurants if no service charge is included. Hotel porters receive SAR 5-10 per bag. Many upscale restaurants add a service charge automatically.

Middle East tipping questions

01 Do you tip in Dubai if service charge is included?

Dubai restaurants typically include a mandatory 10% service charge. An additional tip of 5-10% is appreciated for excellent service but not required. Check your bill for the service charge line before deciding.

02 What is baksheesh in the Middle East?

Baksheesh is a Persian-origin term meaning a small payment for services rendered. In the Middle East it encompasses tipping, charitable giving, and social obligation. In Egypt it functions as an essential economic supplement, while in the Gulf states it is more of a discretionary gesture of appreciation.

03 How much should you tip in Egypt?

In Egypt, tip 10-15% at restaurants if no service charge is included. For small services like porters or bathroom attendants, 10-20 EGP is standard. Tour guides typically receive 100-200 EGP per day. Baksheesh is deeply embedded in Egyptian culture and supplements low base wages.

04 Is tipping expected in Saudi Arabia?

Tipping in Saudi Arabia is appreciated but not as deeply ingrained as in Egypt. Tip 10-15% at restaurants if no service charge is included. Hotel porters receive SAR 5-10 per bag. Many upscale restaurants add a service charge automatically.

Different customs. Same math problem.

Set the local tip percentage. splitty handles the rest, no matter the currency.

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