A tip is a voluntary payment by the guest on top of the bill — and for employed service staff in Germany it is free of income tax and social contributions (§ 3 No. 51 EStG), with no upper limit. Two conditions are decisive: it must be given voluntarily and flow personally to the employee. The exemption does not apply to owners — and card-payment tips follow rules every business should know.
| Situation | Tax treatment |
|---|---|
| Guest → service staff (voluntary) | Tax- and contribution-free, unlimited — also with card payment, provided the tip is passed on fully to the employees. |
| Guest → owner | Business income: subject to income tax; genuinely voluntary tips carry no VAT — clarify edge cases with your tax advisor. |
| Mandatory "service charge" | Not a tip! Compulsory surcharges on the bill are VAT-liable revenue of the business. |
| Tronc / tip pool | A shared pool distributed by the team itself stays tax-free. If the EMPLOYER distributes bindingly by own rules, it risks being treated as wages — leave distribution to the team. |
As of mid-2026, without guarantee — not tax advice. Align specifics (tronc design, cash handling) with your tax advisor.
Yes — the exemption depends on voluntariness and personal receipt, not the payment method. Condition: the business passes them on fully and traceably and does not book them as revenue.
Cash tips handed directly to staff need not run through the till. Card tips inevitably pass through the business — record them as pass-through items and document the payout.
No — voluntary employee tips have been tax-free without limit since 2002. Conspicuously high "tips" will, however, be checked for genuine voluntariness.
As taxable business income — the exemption applies to employees only. Practical tip: point guests to the team, where it arrives tax-free and motivates.