
What is the New Crazy Extra 20% Denver Wants to Add to Restaurant Tabs?
Restaurants in Denver are some of the best in the nation; but are they worth adding an extra 20% to your tab for? Denver's mayor may be pushing this idea through.
Denver Mayor Discusses 20% Restaurant Fee During Podcast
You see a lot of stories these days coming from conversations that happen during a podcast, here's another one. There's a podcast about Denver that Denver Mayor Mike Johnston was on recently, talking about this new fee he has in mind.
There are several restaurants within Denver's Union Station, all of which could be adding 20% to your tab.
Living in Loveland I don't get a lot of chances to get to Denver to eat at one of its restaurants; I can tell you, that if they actually do end up tacking on an additional 20% to "checks" you can count me out.
Why Does the Denver Mayor Want to Add 20% to Restaurant Tabs?
According to the Denver Gazette, the Mayor's concerned about restaurants surviving in Denver, as about 400 have closed over the last few years; a big part of that, according to the Mayor is the rise in minimum wage.
In the podcast the Mayor was discussing a Colorado bill that's under consideration, which states:
The bill requires a local government that has enacted a code or an ordinance imposing a minimum wage that exceeds the state minimum wage to enact another code or ordinance on or before September 1, 2025, that:
- Imposes a tip offset for food and beverage employees in an amount that equals the amount by which the local minimum wage exceeds the state minimum wage, plus $3.02; and
- Takes effect on or before October 1, 2025.
With Denver being one of the cities where the minimum wage is set above the state's minimum of $11.79/hour for tipped employees, Mayor Johnston's idea is to apply a $20% service fee instead of the offset:
From the City Cast Denver podcast via the Denver Gazette:
Interestingly for us, if you had a service charge that comes above the line in the bill, which means it's also taxed — if you had a $100 tab and now you put a 20% service charge, you pay $120, and we tax $120.
REALATED: Will the 16th Street Mall be Getting a New Name?
The city would then share that collected tax back with the restaurants, in Johnston's plan, according to Denver Gazette.
Honestly, all these numbers make me crazy, and I don't completely understand; all I hear is that it will me cost 20% more to dine in Denver.
MORE - Is the NEW Casa Bonita Worth It?
Gallery Credit: Big Rob TSM
MORE- The 10 Oldest Restaurants in Colorado
Gallery Credit: Kelsey Nistel
More From Retro 102.5








