TX tip and tax estimate

Texas Tip Calculator with Tax

Estimate tip, sales tax, the final bill, and each person’s share for a meal or service bill in Texas.

The default field uses the 8.19% average combined estimate. Replace it with the tax rate on your receipt for a closer result.

Planning estimate

8.19%

Average combined state and local sales tax estimate.

State base
6.25%
Avg. local
1.94%
Avg. combined
8.19%

Texas calculator

Calculate tip with a TX tax estimate

Change the tax field when your receipt shows a different local rate.

Tip basis

Estimated total

$0.00

Tip$0.00

Tax$0.00

Each person$0.00

Tip per person$0.00

Planning estimate

Use the average as a starting point

The average combined rate can help when you are planning a meal or checking a bill before the receipt is final. It cannot match every county, city or town, local tax district, restaurant location, or prepared food purchase in Texas.

Receipt rate

Use the printed rate when available

If your receipt shows a different tax rate, enter that rate in the calculator. The printed rate gives a closer total than a statewide average.

When this estimate can differ

Why the receipt total may change

Texas has a 6.25% state rate, but a restaurant in a city with local options can reach a higher combined rate. The receipt tax line is the best input for a final total.

Rate record reviewed June 18, 2026. State base: 6.25%; average combined estimate: 8.19%.

Texas receipt guide

Use the estimate in the right situation

These notes explain why the default can differ from a specific receipt in Texas.

Start with the Texas planning estimate

Texas has a 6.25% statewide base rate in this guide. The calculator begins with an 8.20% average combined estimate to help with early planning. It is not a promise that a particular restaurant, delivery order, or hotel receipt will use that number.

Local components can change the total

Texas local tax can involve city, county, transit authority, and special-purpose district components. That mix is why the rate can change from one address to another. The rate on the receipt is the right number to enter before you pay.

Read the meal line before choosing a tip

Restaurant meals are often taxed, but the total depends on the sale location. Check the subtotal, tax line, and any added business charge. Keep an included charge separate from a voluntary tip so you can see what you are adding.

Plan a group split with the receipt

For a group meal, start with the final total rather than trying to build an exact local rate from the state average. Once the receipt is complete, the calculator can divide tax, tip, and any service charge across the people at the table.

A practical Texas receipt step

Texas local components can combine in a different way from one restaurant address to another. That is why a city, county, transit authority, or special-purpose amount belongs on the receipt check, not in a guess.

For takeout or delivery, save the checkout total and review the tax line before you split it. The final amount can be more useful than a broad statewide planning number.

Quick answer

What tax rate should you use?

Use 8.19% as a quick average combined estimate for Texas when you do not have a receipt. Use the exact rate printed on the receipt for a closer bill total.

Texas cities, counties, transit authorities, and special-purpose districts can add local tax, commonly bringing large-city receipts to 8.25%.

Pre-tax vs post-tax

Compare on a $50 bill

On a $50 bill, a 20% pre-tax tip is $10.00. A 20% post-tax tip using the average estimate is $10.82, about $0.82 more.

Compare tipping before or after tax

Examples

Texas bill examples

These examples use a 20% pre-tax tip and the 8.19% average combined estimate.

Texas bill examples using the average combined tax estimate
BillEstimated tax20% tipTotalSplit 2 waysSplit 4 ways
$25.00$2.05$5.00$32.05$16.02$8.01
$50.00$4.09$10.00$64.09$32.05$16.02
$75.00$6.14$15.00$96.14$48.07$24.04
$100.00$8.19$20.00$128.19$64.09$32.05

Rate data and limits

Where this estimate comes from

Data retrieved
June 18, 2026
Source version
January 1, 2026
What it represents
Average combined rate is a statewide planning figure that combines the listed state base rate with an average local component. It is not an address-level restaurant tax rate.

Restaurant meals are usually taxable, but the exact local rate depends on the sale location.

The rate record is retained from the reviewed source record. The page uses it only as a starting estimate and tells readers to use the receipt rate for a closer total.

FAQ

Texas tip and tax questions

What tax rate should I use for a restaurant bill in Texas?

Start with 8.19% only when you do not have a receipt. For a closer estimate, enter the tax rate printed on the bill. Texas cities, counties, transit authorities, and special-purpose districts can add local tax, commonly bringing large-city receipts to 8.25%.

Should I tip before or after tax in Texas?

Many people tip before tax because sales tax is not part of the service price. Tipping after tax is simpler and slightly more generous. USTipCalc lets you compare both.

Is the Texas state sales tax rate the exact restaurant tax rate?

No. The 6.25% state base rate is not an exact restaurant rate. Texas has a 6.25% state rate, but a restaurant in a city with local options can reach a higher combined rate. The receipt tax line is the best input for a final total.

Can I use this page for exact Texas tax compliance?

No. This Texas page is for personal receipt estimates. It is not tax, legal, payroll, or financial advice.

Useful next steps

Popular USTipCalc tools

Use these related calculators when your receipt includes tax, a service charge, or a group split.