YoungNVHunter
New member
My wife is getting ready to go on a guided Elk hunt and is paying quite a bit for this adventure. Is it customary to tip the guide? If so how much?
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I was a licensed guide, working for a outfitter in Idaho for years. I made 1200.00-1600.00 per month plus room and board depending on the year. During the 8 week season, and a 3-4 weeks before/after setting up/taking down camp, a guide will work very long, hard hours. During the hunts, we were up a 4-5am taking care of stock and to bed at usually 11pm, 7 days a week and 8 weeks long. A guide spends a good 18 hours a day with a client usually not more than 10 feet from him.
At times, your life could depend on your guide and you guide has to trust you with a loaded firearm.
If I received 0-200.00, the client was considered un-respectful. If that client returned for a hunt in the following years, I would place him with a less experienced, less friendly guide. Just the way it was. I agree, as with any sort of tipping, the worker needs to earn it and not expect it.
Think about how much the total trip is costing you, about how cool was the guide and did he really care about you. His job is keeping you safe, making sure you had a great experience, and doing is best to get you game.
400-500.00 is a decent tip on a week long hunt, 600-700.00 will show you care, 700-1000.00 will get you VIP treatment if ever returning for a hunt.
Cool things like binos, spotting scopes, guns, knives, if good quality, also are much appreciated. Most guides I know, do not have the resources for great equipment, and if given some, the memory will last a life time. I had a client had me a custom knife at the beginning of a 7 day hunt. He said this is yours, if we get an elk that you can use it on, or not. Cool way to start off a relationship.
If the guide is the outfitter, than I don't see the need of a tip unless it is something that has meaning to you, not money. Cooks and wranglers appreciate some loving too. Usually 100-200.00 from each hunter will really be great.
This is just my opinion, the guide should be fun, hard working, and have safety first in his mind.
IdahoRob;2321238 If I received 0-200.00 said:I've been on a number of guided hunts and your exactly the type of guide/outfitter I wouldn't book with. I tip better than average, but if I ever found out it wasn't enough and I had a crappy future hunt as a result, I'd bad mouth the guide and outfitter on every hunting website there is for as long as I could type. Glad to hear you're out of the business...
I was a licensed guide, working for a outfitter in Idaho for years. I made 1200.00-1600.00 per month plus room and board depending on the year. During the 8 week season, and a 3-4 weeks before/after setting up/taking down camp, a guide will work very long, hard hours. During the hunts, we were up a 4-5am taking care of stock and to bed at usually 11pm, 7 days a week and 8 weeks long. A guide spends a good 18 hours a day with a client usually not more than 10 feet from him.
At times, your life could depend on your guide and you guide has to trust you with a loaded firearm.
If I received 0-200.00, the client was considered un-respectful. If that client returned for a hunt in the following years, I would place him with a less experienced, less friendly guide. Just the way it was. I agree, as with any sort of tipping, the worker needs to earn it and not expect it.
Think about how much the total trip is costing you, about how cool was the guide and did he really care about you. His job is keeping you safe, making sure you had a great experience, and doing is best to get you game.
400-500.00 is a decent tip on a week long hunt, 600-700.00 will show you care, 700-1000.00 will get you VIP treatment if ever returning for a hunt.
Cool things like binos, spotting scopes, guns, knives, if good quality, also are much appreciated. Most guides I know, do not have the resources for great equipment, and if given some, the memory will last a life time. I had a client had me a custom knife at the beginning of a 7 day hunt. He said this is yours, if we get an elk that you can use it on, or not. Cool way to start off a relationship.
If the guide is the outfitter, than I don't see the need of a tip unless it is something that has meaning to you, not money. Cooks and wranglers appreciate some loving too. Usually 100-200.00 from each hunter will really be great.
This is just my opinion, the guide should be fun, hard working, and have safety first in his mind.
So, the size of the tip generates what service the hunter gets after already PAYING to hunt with you? That sort of bullshit is why this sight keeps getting bigger with hunters who would rather do it ourselves and fail, than to pay people like you.
So, here's a question. I'm an EMT. Because I'm a volunteer and don't get paid, then by your resoning I should let my patients die because I don't get paid....? Afterall, I'm providing them a service...