Tipping Mousekeeping?

autigger

Member
I have not been to WDW since I was in middle school and I have not stayed on site since I was even younger. I am taking my family (wife and two small children) in September and I have read in a couple of places about tipping the mouse keeping service.

Is this necessary, and, if so, what amount is appropriate? Does this help the likelihood of receiving "towel animals" or are towel animals usually just for deluxe resorts? We are staying at All-Star Music.
 

disneyracefan

New Member
we always leave about 5 dollars a day for mousekeeping and as far as the towel animals go we always take them with us when we check out. we have never been charged for them and i also hear that it cost more for the bars of soap then for the wash rags or towels and who does not come home without at least 1 bar of mickey soap or shampoo
 
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tecowdw

Well-Known Member
Only during one of my stays did I ever leave a tip in the room. It didn't get me anything special at all (no towel animals, etc). For me to tip Mousekeeping, I would expect it to be an extra special job they do. Rarely have I had anything out of the ordinary special in relation to housekeeping services at any of the resorts. My room is extra simple to clean too being non-clutter type people - just make bed, clean bathroom and replace towels. Many of them don't even say nothing when you pass them in the halls anyway (but not always, of course) like they use to years ago.

Yes, I dislike tipping at restaurants too for ordinary service.
:drevil:
 
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KrazyKemp

Member
ELopez said:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I would think you are not supposed to keep them. They are still resort towels.

Like that stops anybody...

Can you honestly say that you have never brought home a souvenir from a hotel?

Last time, I didn't recieve any towel animals, but I did sneak away with a few hand soaps that had Mickey on them and considered taking some towels (they are so huge!) but voted against it, due to lack of space in my luggage...
 
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tigsmom

Well-Known Member
KrazyKemp said:
Like that stops anybody...

Can you honestly say that you have never brought home a souvenir from a hotel?

Last time, I didn't recieve any towel animals, but I did sneak away with a few hand soaps that had Mickey on them and considered taking some towels (they are so huge!) but voted against it, due to lack of space in my luggage...

The soaps, shampoos and lotions are disposable items and are there for you to use. If you ask mousekeeping they will give you an extra set or two to take home. Towels are a different story.
 
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wannab@dis

Well-Known Member
KrazyKemp said:
Like that stops anybody...

Can you honestly say that you have never brought home a souvenir from a hotel?

Last time, I didn't recieve any towel animals, but I did sneak away with a few hand soaps that had Mickey on them and considered taking some towels (they are so huge!) but voted against it, due to lack of space in my luggage...
Are you being serious? If you can't figure out the difference between the little disposable shampoo/soaps and towels.... :lookaroun

I can honestly say I have never STOLEN any towels from a hotel. :wave:
 
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The Mom

Moderator
Premium Member
tigsmom said:
The soaps, shampoos and lotions are disposable items and are there for you to use. If you ask mousekeeping they will give you an extra set or two to take home. Towels are a different story.

Exactly! Once you open the shampoo, unwrap the soap, etc it CANNOT be used by anyone else (nor would anyone else want it! :hurl: ) But towels are constantly being washed and reused.

Now, I must confess that I DO have a washcloth animal at home. :lookaroun

I have always tipped mousekeepers (and maids at any other hotels) as long as my room has been cleaned to my satisfaction. I've found that finding towel animals has nothing to do with tipping, which resort, etc. As mentioned, some mousekeepers know how to make them, and others don't. Some mousekeepers are creative with stuffed animals, others aren't.

It's the luck of the draw.

Also, does anyone know if the deluxe resorts pay mousekeepers more, as they charge more for the room? Perhaps working at the deluxe resorts is a step up in the ladder, so once they've "made it" they don't try as hard, unless they have the credentials to move up into direct guest services. (front desk, concierge, etc)
 
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Nansafan

Active Member
I have stayed at Deluxe and Moderate resorts and have received towel animals only this last trip when we stayed at the Poly. I believe (just my opinion here) the trick to towel animals is if the Mousekeeper has time and if they think there might be children in the room i.e. stuffed animals or toys around. My 17 yr old neice brings a stuffed rabbit with her on vacation. This past trip, the rabbit was tucked under the covers holding the remote control. Also this trip an elephant was made with towels and the cushions from the daybed.

Yes, we tip Mousekeeping always so I don't think this had anything special to do with it. Our Mousekeeper apparently had the time this trip.
 
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tigsmom

Well-Known Member
The Mom said:
Exactly! Once you open the shampoo, unwrap the soap, etc it CANNOT be used by anyone else (nor would anyone else want it! :hurl: ) But towels are constantly being washed and reused.

Now, I must confess that I DO have a washcloth animal at home. :lookaroun

I have always tipped mousekeepers (and maids at any other hotels) as long as my room has been cleaned to my satisfaction. I've found that finding towel animals has nothing to do with tipping, which resort, etc. As mentioned, some mousekeepers know how to make them, and others don't. Some mousekeepers are creative with stuffed animals, others aren't.

It's the luck of the draw.

Also, does anyone know if the deluxe resorts pay mousekeepers more, as they charge more for the room? Perhaps working at the deluxe resorts is a step up in the ladder, so once they've "made it" they don't try as hard, unless they have the credentials to move up into direct guest services. (front desk, concierge, etc)

I have no idea about the pay, but we have been fortunate enough to be able to stay in Deluxe resorts each trip and have gotten towel animals in the WL (also arranged the stuffed animals daily) & the Boardwalk Inn, but not the Contemporary or Polynesian.

I did notice last summer that mousekeeping was short staffed. I spoke with one woman at the BWI in August and she told me she had the entire floor to herself. She apologized that the room wasn't ready when we came back for an afternoon break. There were towl animals waiting for us when we arrived, but none during the trip so I guess she just didn't have the time.
 
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gemini

New Member
Main Street USA said:
The tipping a the end of the week thing may be a mistake.

Yes, you really should tip each day. If I'm traveling alone on business, it's $2/night left on the pillow. Otherwise, it's $1/person on the pillow. If I make a special request, I'll tip a little extra.
 
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Our mousekeeper on our last trip to Pop told us to take the towel animals. She too would put my son's cars and animals in the window. He loved to come back each day to see what was there. I think in our 5 night stay, we got about 10-12 animals left. She was really good. She left several extra towel w/o being asked. So many that we never ran out and had extras each day. I did not tip each night, but we saw her each day right around our room and on the last day, just handed her a $25 tip. Next time I will do it on a daily basis though. To make sure everyone gets a share just in case it is not the same person.
 
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kasey1988

Well-Known Member
We stayed at the ASMO and tipped 1$ per person per night (so all together we left 3$ a night) we never got any towel animals or our stuffed animaly arranged in any way. we even put the new ones out on the night stand each day after we bought a new one and nothing cute was done. but we did get extra towels when requested! enough that we had alot of extras!
 
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wannab@dis

Well-Known Member
magicalmemories said:
Our mousekeeper on our last trip to Pop told us to take the towel animals.
You may want to check with the front desk / manager next time since I highly doubt the mousekeeper has the authority to give away Disney property. ;)
 
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Dagger

Member
Thanks for the info. on tipping! I was unsure of how much and I feel like $2 is not a lot but I'm relieved that is the norm and I also realize that that's just one room of how many!!!
 
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An extremely helpful board! As a Jersey Shore girl, I've always tipped at the end of the week (I'm also inclined to put the DND sign up until the night before I leave). Now I will leave a tip daily, regardless of the towel animals. Which, I must confess I would probably steal(see above Jersey reference).
 
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Tiggerfanatic

Well-Known Member
Tips for ME bus driver

This will be the first time we have used the Magical Express service and am unsure if we are supposed to tip the driver. I tipped the Mears shuttle driver, but he also loaded/unloaded our luggage at the airport and resort. As I understand, with ME our luggage will magically appear in our room sometime after we check in, so does that guy just lose out?:veryconfu
 
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Being four young twenty somethings, my friends and I weren't sure what to tip at our last visit to the World. All of us had been a waiter/waitress at sometime during our highschool/college years, and we knew that 15 - 20% was standard...but we were like, "15-20% of what, exactly?"

So we decided to figure it out at the end of our trip. But then a FANTASTIC mousekeeper @ All Star Music started setting our things up in the room - we're all pretty sad. We have stuffed animals, blankies, etc. and she would arrange them in the window in little scenes. It was so cute.

What is customary? A dollar per person per night? Cuz we stayed 8 nights, so that would've been $32...and does OUR housekeeper get it all? Should we do it per day?

And on a side note (and I didn't highlight it because I didn't want to turn this into a big deal, but I still HAVE to say it), someone mentioned they dislike tipping for ordinary service. That bothers me tremendously.

First of all, I know many people think that if you're paying all this money for your food, then why should you have to tip? Well most waitstaff only gets paid $2.75 - $5.00 an hour. The restaurant calculates and decides on wages based on the age-old custom of tipping. This is what the waitstaff lives on. So instead of thinking, "Well that's the restaurant's problem, not ours," please don't go to a restaurant if you don't (or won't) tip...no one wants to wait on people who aren't grateful for their service.

IF YOU GET A BAD SERVER...don't just leave nothing and think, "Well, they know why they didn't get anything." They probably don't. Some servers are awful...I totally acknowledge that. So write them a note instead - you were a poor server. You didn't remember our drinks, you forgot coloring books for the kids, you were rude, you didn't check back with us...etc. Just leaving them nothing makes them feel vindicated, like, "They were SO cheap, and I did a great job."

One night I was SO super crabby, and this table with a forty dollar check left me four dollars and told me so on a note. I cried (cuz that's what I do), but in the end, they were right. I wasn't the greatest waitress and they were obviously good tippers who left 10% because I didn't do the best job. I was lucky I got 10%.

What is ordinary service...coming to the table, asking for drinks, coming back and asking for the order, bringing out the food, checking to make sure things are okay a couple of times, asking for dessert, bringing the bill, and checking someone out, then clearing their table. That is what I consider good service...unsure what ordinary means.

Some people like you to play with their kids, keep them entertained, talk to the family, etc. Others don't want to talk to you at all. How are waiters/waitresses supposed to know?

And families with little children - if your kids leave a mess, you tip 20% or more for sure. We babysit 3 year old triplets, and they leave a DISASTER anywhere we go. We pick up as much as we can on the table, then leave extra $$ for whoever has to pick up their smushed food and junk on the floor.

I figure it's the same with mousekeeping, yes? If you're slobs, you leave more? Yes? Let me know :~) ;) Sorry if my little rant scared anyone...I'm not super bitter, I swear!! I just needed to get it out.:wave:
 
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brertigger

Member
My family typically leaves a dollar per person per night, provided the service remains good. I say this because recently, we had been leaving tips daily, and then come back one day and the mousekeeper left the sack of garbage on the eating table! :mad: The trash was starting to spill out even
Needless to say, no more tips that trip, plus housekeeping got a call about the poor service.

On previous trips, we have gotten great service (like towel animals), so those tips were increased sometimes.
 
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On our last trip we stayed 10 nights and we left $2-3 per night (there was just the two of us staying)... We got about 7 towel animals over the course of the stay. One day we forgot to take the privacy card out of the key card slot in the door.. When we called for towels when we returned, our mousekeeper had even put two small towel animals in the bag for us.. She was just awesome!! We left her a $10 tip at the end of the week..
 
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