D.C. Voters Approve Eliminating the Tip Credit System

On Nov. 8, 2022, Washington, D.C., voters overwhelmingly approved "Initiative 82," which, once certified and implemented, will eliminate the tip-credit system in D.C. With this new law, D.C. joins the ranks of seven states with no tip credit: Alaska, California, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, Oregon and Washington state.

Under the current tip-credit law, D.C. employers are entitled to claim customers’ tips as partial credit toward the employer’s obligation to pay a minimum wage. For example, rather than pay a bartender $16.10 per hour (the current minimum wage in D.C.), a D.C. restaurant is permitted to pay the bartender $5.35 per hour, so long as the bartender makes up the difference ($10.75) in customer tips. This difference is called the “tip credit.” If a tipped employee does not receive gratuities sufficient to meet the minimum wage, the employer must make up the difference by paying the employee enough to reach the minimum wage.

Under Initiative 82, the tip credit would be eliminated gradually, with full implementation by 2027. While the campaign for Initiative 82 focused almost entirely on the restaurant industry, it would affect all tipped employees, including restaurant servers, bartenders, hairdressers, bellhops, valets, barbers and nail salon workers. D.C. employers are expected to raise prices in in response, and mandatory service charges may become more popular on patrons' bills.

This initiative was familiar for D.C. residents, who approved a nearly identical measure in 2018, called Initiative 77. After that vote, however, the D.C. Council voted by a margin of 8-5 to repeal Initiative 77. Ultimately, D.C. repealed Initiative 77 with the enactment of the Tipped Wage Workers Fairness Amendment Act of 2018. Now, however, it has been reported that a majority of the D.C. Council supports eliminating the tax credit system.

Download the Employer’s Guide to D.C. Employment Statutes

McGuireWoods has developed a comprehensive online guide to help companies navigate the complex employment laws of Washington, D.C. The 130-page, fully annotated publication is designed to help human resources professionals, in-house counsel and small-business owners avoid pitfalls and obtain answers to common questions about the District’s workplace laws.

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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