Book Your Adventure 1-800-346-8747
Book Your Adventure 1-800-346-8747

Consultant’s Corner with Travis Baker: How to Tip? How Much?

Travis Baker
|  
Species: Sailfish

Tipping: What’s Appropriate?

Probably the hardest part of your trip will be figuring out what is appropriate to plan to bring to tip. We’re always happy to help you figure out your target range when you book, but most of the questions we get fall into these categories.

1. How Much?

As consultants, one of the most commonly asked questions is “How much do I tip?”. Well, there’s a lot that goes in to this answer.  First off there’s no right or wrong answer, and it’s completely discretionary. As with tipping wait staff, we suggest you start at the industry standard, and if you have an exceptional experience, you can give a better tip.

2. Industry Standard

However, the industry standard is somewhere in that 10%-20% (of the trip cost) range, but this can vary depending on the type of hunting or fishing trip you’re on. If you are completing a hunt where you have the opportunity to harvest multiple animals or species, this may impact the amount you should plan to tip. On some trips, you only need to tip one person, but on other types, you have a staff that should be tipped. You’ll definitely know ahead of time which category you fall under.

3. Single Tip Needed for Some Trips

A horseback dall sheep hunt in the Brooks Range where your guide does everything (guide, cook, wrangler, etc.), the guide would be the only one you’d tip, and you’d typically tip him or her directly at the end of the hunt.

4. Multiple-tip Trips

On the other hand, a lodge-based fishing trip that not only involves a guide, but a full staff including a chef, servers, cleaning staff, mechanic, etc., the tip might be given to the lodge manager and pooled (split amongst everyone). Consult with the lodge manager at some point during your trip as to how they prefer handling tips, but plan to need to tip multiple people.

5. Currency

American dollars are always king. No matter where you are in the world, we recommend you tip in American dollars.

Recent Articles

Popular Sailfish Hunts

Outfitter Special
Fishing, Bonefish   ·
Belize
From 
$43,820
$39,900
Outfitter #1069
Entire Private Island Originally $43,820 NOW $39,900!  OR Private Cabana Normally $10,955 Now $9,975!
Sailfish, Marlin   ·
Guatemala
From 
$2,675
Outfitter #428

Related Articles

Hunt the Fjords: Authentic Greenland Hunt for Caribou and Musk Ox

Hunt the Fjords: Authentic Greenland Hunt for Caribou and Musk Ox

When a boat noses into a remote Greenland fjord and you step ashore holding your rifle with an experienced Inuit guide at your side, it’s immediately clear that this isn’t a typical hunt. It’s not even a typical Greenland hunt.

Most Greenland hunting is centered around Kangerlussuaq, where larger outfitters operate within fixed concessions. WTA’s exclusive hunt in Greenland breaks that mold. Working solely with local Inuit guides Hans-Erik and his son Leon, this hunt takes just two to four hunters at a time into the wild western fjords in pursuit of caribou and musk ox. It’s one of the most intimate and authentic Greenland hunts available today.

A Different Kind of Operation

Based in Sisimiut on Greenland’s western coast, this is a deliberately small operation. There are no large lodges or rotating waves of hunters. Instead, you’ll stay in comfortable canvas tents with cots, enjoy meals prepared by Leon’s fiancée, and hunt open terrain reminiscent of Alaska’s Brooks Range. Only 15 to 20 hunters are hosted each season between August through mid-October.

From Greenland’s second-largest town, Sisimiut, you’ll travel north by Targa 24 boat into fjords where the guides have hunted for generations. This is nomadic-style hunting: glassing vast country and operating without confined concession boundaries.

The Hunting

The strategy is simple and effective. Glass from the water, locate animals, go ashore, make your stalk. Boat access allows you to cover far more country than land-based operations, increasing opportunities while keeping pressure low.

Musk ox success is essentially 100%. These prehistoric-looking animals are rarely difficult once found—the challenge is locating them. They’re especially well-suited to bowhunters, often allowing close, deliberate approaches.

Caribou demand more effort and patience. Trophy quality is respectable, and the experience is exactly what many hunters seek: challenging stalks, stunning country, and bulls worthy of both the wall and the table. These caribou deliver a complete hunt—earned, memorable, and deeply satisfying.

Cultural Immersion

Get Trip Specials & Cancellations,
Right Where You Want It.

No spam. Just the good stuff. Opt-out anytime.