🇦🇺Australia · Hotel Concierge
How much to tip a hotel concierge in Australia (2026 Guide)
OptionalCash preferred
Nothing routinely; A$10–20 for a meaningful favour
Tipping calculator
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Cultural notes
Australian hotel concierges do not expect tips for simple requests like directions, restaurant recommendations or booking common reservations. For an unusual favour — securing a table at a booked-out restaurant, last-minute event tickets, organising a custom itinerary — A$10–20 cash on departure is a gracious gesture. The transactional bell-desk culture seen in some US hotels does not exist locally.
Frequently asked questions
Do I tip every time I ask the concierge a question?
No. Tip once, at the end of stay, only if they went out of their way.
Tipping other services in Australia
- Sit-down restaurantRound up to nearest A$5–10, or 10% at upmarket venues
- Counter / takeawayNo tip; drop coins in the jar if you want
- CaféDrop coins in the tip jar, or nothing
- BarGenerally nothing; offer to "buy them a drink" for great service
- HousekeepingA$2–5 per night at upscale hotels; nothing at budget
- PorterA$2–5 per bag at upscale hotels; nothing elsewhere
- TaxiRound up to nearest A$5 or A$10
- RideshareOptional in-app tip A$1–5; most riders leave nothing
- Food deliveryOptional in-app tip A$2–5 for difficult orders
- Grocery deliveryGenerally nothing; A$2–5 only for very large orders
- HairdresserA$5–20 for an excellent cut/colour; many do not tip at all
- SpaNothing routinely; A$10–20 for exceptional treatment
- Tour guideA$10–20 per person full-day; A$2–5 short walking tours
- Tattoo artist10–20% in major-city studios; flat A$20–50 for smaller pieces
- ValetA$2–5 cash on car return
- Airport baggageA$2–5 per bag if a porter assists (rare)
- BuskerA$1–5 in the hat if you stop to listen
- MoversNo cash tip; offer cold drinks, snacks or lunch
- TradespersonNo tip; cup of tea / cold drink is the norm
Last verified: · Sources: lonelyplanet.com