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How much do servers really make?

Updated July 2026

Ask three servers what they make and you'll get an hourly wage, a "good night" number, and a shrug. All three answers dodge the real question, because server pay has three moving parts: a base wage that varies by state, tips that vary by shift, and a tip-out that quietly takes a cut of both good and bad nights.

The honest answer: a wide range

Nationally, most servers land somewhere between $15 and $35 an hour with tips counted, and the spread inside one city — even inside one restaurant — is enormous. The rough tiers most industry surveys and workers themselves describe:

  • Counter service and diners: often near minimum wage plus a few dollars an hour in tips.
  • Casual full-service: commonly $18–$28/hour all-in on decent shifts.
  • High-volume or upscale: $30–$50+/hour on strong nights is realistic, with brutal variance.

Treat every number above as a placeholder. Your market, your section, your shifts, and your restaurant's tip-out policy matter more than any national average — which is exactly why your own tracked number beats any article's.

Why the posted wage means almost nothing

Server pay is anchored by state law, not the menu prices. In tip-credit states the cash wage can be as low as $2.13/hour, with tips expected to carry you to minimum wage; in states like California and Washington, servers get the full minimum wage plus tips. Two servers with identical tables in different states can differ by $10+/hour before a single tip lands. Look up your state on the server pay by state pages.

The tip-out changes everything

A "$300 night" isn't $300 if you tipped out 3% of $1,600 in sales to the bar and a point to the bussers. That's routinely 15–25% of gross tips gone — the single most under-counted number in the industry. The tip-out calculator shows what your policy really costs per shift, and how tip-outs work explains the common structures.

The only number that settles it: true hourly

Take-home for the shift (tips − tip-out + wages) divided by hours worked. It's the only way to compare a slow lunch to a slammed Friday close, or one job's offer to another's. Most servers who start computing it find their shifts differ by 1.5–2× per hour — knowledge that's worth real money when picking up or dropping shifts. Try yours in the true hourly calculator.

Find your own number in two weeks

Log every shift for two weeks — cash, card, hours, tip-out — and you'll know your real average, your best and worst nights, and what a "good week" actually means in dollars. That's the whole premise of Tipfolio: 30 seconds a shift, and the guessing stops.

Track it automatically

Tipfolio logs your tips and hours in 30 seconds a shift, then does the tip-out and tax math for you.

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