My Las Vegas valet parked my car so far away I had to take a shuttle back — he still expected a $10 tip

My name is Jason, I’m 33, and I was in Las Vegas last weekend for a quick trip. I was staying at one of the bigger hotels on the Strip, the kind where everything looks close until you actually try to walk anywhere.

When I pulled up to the hotel, I decided to use valet parking.

Mostly for convenience.

Also because finding parking in Vegas can feel like a full-time job.

The valet took my keys, gave me a ticket, and said the usual:

“Your car will be right here when you need it.”

That turned out to be… optimistic.

The next morning, I called down to have my car brought up.

They said it would be about 10 minutes.

Fifteen minutes passed.

Then twenty.

Finally, I got a call saying my car was ready — but not at the valet stand.

Instead, they told me I needed to go to a secondary pickup location.

Which, according to them, was “just a short distance away.”

That “short distance” turned out to be a completely different parking area behind another building.

When I got there, I was told I needed to take a shuttle to reach the actual lot where my car was parked.

At this point I was already committed, so I got on the shuttle with a few other confused-looking people.

After a couple minutes of driving, we arrived at what looked like a massive overflow parking lot.

Rows and rows of cars.

Far from the hotel.

Far from everything.

Eventually, I found my car.

Perfectly fine.

Just… incredibly far away from where I had originally handed it over.

As I was about to leave, one of the valet staff members walked over, handed me my keys again like he had just personally delivered the car, and stood there for a second.

Waiting.

You know the moment.

The subtle pause.

The expectation.

The unspoken:

“Tip?”

Now, I’m not against tipping valets.

If someone parks your car, retrieves it quickly, and saves you time, that makes sense.

But in this situation, I had:

Waited 20+ minutes.
Walked to a secondary location.
Taken a shuttle.
Found my own car.

So I asked, half joking, “Do I still tip if I basically picked it up myself?”

He smiled and said, “We still parked it for you.”

Which… is technically true.

But also feels like only half the service.

In the end, I gave a small tip because I didn’t want to make things awkward.

But the whole experience left me wondering.

At what point does valet parking stop being a convenience and start being a self-guided treasure hunt for your own car?

Because if I’m taking public transportation to retrieve my vehicle…

I feel like I’ve crossed into a completely different service category.

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