After Undercurrent subscriber Henry C.Campbell
(Tacoma, WA) attended the Dive Equipment Manufacturers
Association conference in 2006, dive operator AquaCat
Cruises sent him a flyer, offering a special discount on
a Bahamas cruise with its Blackbeard’s Cruises division.
The regular retail rate was $1,995 per person but because
Campbell was a dive professional, he was offered a spot for
$1,095. Then he found out about the $300 gratuity he was
supposed to pay in advance.
An AquaCat agent contacted him after he had booked,
stating prepaid tips for crew were mandatory. Campbell
said no thanks and canceled. “They never said up front
how much the tip was,” he says. “Then they e-mail later saying
I have to pay the tip ahead of time. Why don’t they just
say the trip is $1,385?”
AquaCat Cruises does not mandate pre-paid tips on regular-
priced cruises, but does so for the discounted cruises offered to dive professionals, charging
them 15 percent of the non-discounted
trip price. “We have learned
that people tend to base their crew
gratuity on the price they pay rather
than on the value of the trip,” says
spokesperson Beth Olivera. “For this reason, we require all
non-revenue or reduced-priced passengers to prepay the
tip based on 15 percent of the trip value. In the liveaboard
industry, crews rely heavily on gratuity for income and if
tips are based on this lower amount, employees are the ones
who suffer.” Olivera says this fact was listed on the flyer
Campbell received.
AquaCat’s required tip came to 30 percent of the price,
and that rubbed Campbell the wrong way, just as it did us.
Maybe it’s just a matter of semantics. Why not just charge
$1,385 and say gratuities are included? Or charge $1,195
and add a 15 percent service charge? Either way would be
a lot more customer-friendly than demanding a tip – what
one should give after they get good service – in advance.