// PATTAYA RESTAURANT GUIDE

Tipping & restaurant etiquette in Pattaya

A practical, no-fluff guide to tipping rules, service charge confusion, and how to navigate Thai dining without making accidental missteps.

Tipping in Pattaya — the simple version

Tipping in Thailand is appreciated but not expected. The rules are different by venue type:

VenueStandard tipNotes
Street food / market stallsRound upNot expected; round nearest 10 baht
Casual Thai restaurants20-50 THBOptional; a small token is friendly
Mid-range restaurants5-10% if no service chargeCheck bill — 10% may already be added
Upscale restaurants10% on top of service charge if exceptionalService charge is standard, tip extra is generous
Hotel restaurants50-100 THB or 5%Service charge usually included
Bartenders20-50 THB per drink roundRound up; bar staff appreciate visible tipping
Drivers (Grab/Bolt)10-20 THBOptional; round up the fare

The "++" pricing puzzle

Many Pattaya restaurants quote prices as "500++", which means: 500 baht + 10% service charge + 7% VAT = 588 baht actual.

This is the most common source of bill confusion for travelers. To avoid surprises:

  • Look at the menu's footer — there's almost always a note saying "All prices subject to 10% service charge and 7% VAT" or similar
  • If you see "++" after the price, it's tax-and-service-extra
  • If prices are listed without symbols, it's almost always net (all-in)
  • For tipping math, service charge already counts as tip — you don't need to add more unless the service was exceptional

Use our bill split calculator to figure the exact total.

Restaurant etiquette — what locals do

Greetings and seating

Most Thai restaurants greet you with a wai (palms together, slight bow) — return it for upscale places; a smile is fine at casual ones. You'll usually be shown to a table; don't seat yourself at sit-down places. Walk-ins to busy restaurants in high season may get a 15-20 minute wait — book ahead at the better places.

Ordering rules

  • Order in stages, not all at once. Thai dishes are meant to arrive when ready, not synchronized. Order more later if needed.
  • Family-style is default. Multiple dishes for the table, plain rice for each person, share everything. Personal plate-of-one-thing is foreign at most Thai restaurants.
  • Ask for spice level explicitly. "Thai spicy" at most places means very hot. Westerners default to "mai phet" (not spicy) or "phet nit noi" (a little spicy).
  • Ice in everything. Drinks come with ice unless you specify "mai sai nam keng" (no ice). Most ice in Pattaya is now factory-made and safe.
  • Sticky rice is for Northeast/North dishes. Order plain steamed jasmine rice with most central/southern dishes; sticky with Isaan/Northern.

Eating

  • Fork pushes; spoon eats. Thai-style eating uses fork in left hand to push food onto spoon in right hand. Knives are rare. Chopsticks for noodle soups only.
  • Don't pour your own drink. Companions pour for each other; it's a small kindness ritual at sit-down places.
  • Sharing dishes don't get split between plates. Take small portions to your plate as you eat; let everyone else do the same.
  • Thank the staff with "khop khun ka/khap" (women say "ka", men "khap"). Goes a long way.

What NOT to do

  • Don't put your feet up on chairs or tables. Feet are considered the lowest part of the body in Thai culture; pointing them at people or food is rude.
  • Don't touch heads, even of children — heads are considered sacred.
  • Don't raise your voice. Confrontation is deeply uncomfortable in Thai culture; even when there's a problem, address it calmly.
  • Don't haggle over restaurant prices. Markets yes, restaurants no.
  • Don't waste food obviously. Better to order less in stages than over-order and leave half.
The smile rule: Thai service culture runs on smiles. Smile at staff, smile when you make a request, smile when you say thank you. It's not performative — it's the basic social currency of Thai interactions.

Special situations

  • Buddhist holidays: No alcohol served at most restaurants on a few specific days each year (Buddhist holy days). Check in advance if your trip includes one.
  • Songkran (mid-April): Most restaurants are open but the city is essentially a giant water fight. Plan dinner indoors and dress accordingly.
  • Chinese New Year (late Jan/early Feb): Many Thai-Chinese restaurants close for several days. Check before going.
  • Royal mourning periods: Subdued atmosphere across the country. Music may be muted; staff may wear black.
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