Baristas Slam 'Pay It Forward' Chains on Drive-Thru Lines: 'I Actively Don't Want You To'一位前星巴克咖啡师病毒对showing the downside of the seemingly good movement.

ByEmily Rella

Doing a kind deed for others is usually a good thing, but in certain situations, it could inadvertently make things worse for others involved.

And according to a former Starbucks barista, "pay-it-forward" chains are one of those things that employees would like you to stop. In a video that has now garnered over 2.4 million views, TikTok'er "Tiffany" explained to viewers why it's best to "break the chain."

Pay-it-forward lines are simple in concept — one customer gets to the register at a drive-thru and offers to pay for the person behind them, thus inciting a chain of customers paying for one another.

The problem? The baristas aren't being tipped on the orders that are being paid for, losing out on valuable money when working a service job.

@tiffanycuh#stitchwith @bennettcardoso i do this so much i get free drinks at my store#nourisheveryyou#ReTokforNature#starbucks#starbuckshack#starbucksbarista♬ original sound - miserablehotgirl

"When you get to the window, you say 'I do not I do not want to pay for the person behind me,' you take the money that you were gonna pay for your drink and give that to the barista as a tip as they deserve," she explained of breaking the chain in the drive-thru line. "Take your drink for free and then you move on. That way the pay it forward line is broken, the barista is happy they have their tip and you have a free drink and your barista will probably like you a little bit more."

Former and current baristas and other drive-thru employees flooded the comment section in solidarity, seconding her statements and explaining how damaging the pay-it-forward lines can be on the job.

"As a barista, not only should you not feel obligated to continue it, I actively don't want you to especially when it's busy," one user said.

"Not a single worker WANTS a pay it forward chain. yeah it's nice, but if you break it they will all be grateful," another added.

According toIndeed, the average salary of a Starbucks worker is $14.64 per hour.

Wavy Line
Emily Rella

Entrepreneur Staff

Senior News Writer

Emily Rella is a Senior News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was an editor at Verizon Media. Her coverage spans features, business, lifestyle, tech, entertainment, and lifestyle. She is a 2015 graduate of Boston College and a Ridgefield, CT native. Find her on Twitter at @EmilyKRella.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Data & Recovery

Store More With 20TB of Cloud Storage Space, Just $99.99 for Life

Keep more of your data organized in the cloud for a one-time fee.

Business Process

This Department Might Be Holding Your Business Back. Here's How to Change That.

Human resources has become too often disconnected from the bottom line. Here's how to deftly integrate the two to address 21st-century challenges.

Business News

How One Couple Became Multi-Unit, Multi-Brand Franchise Owners

When Matt and Anne Evers took the leap to buy a franchise, they never imagined they'd grow to 13 locations across two brands just eight years later.

Leadership

4 Key Indicators It's Time for You to Hire Your First Employees and Stop Doing Everything Alone

Deciding on the perfect timing to make the shift from solopreneur to team leader can be challenging, but there are certain signs of whether you are prepared or not to take the plunge and recruit staff. Take a look and see if you've reached these milestones and if you should start thinking about hiring outside help.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

企业家是不能过度指狗万官方望太多a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.