FAQs
Do you take brunch reservations?
No, sorry, we do not. We seat our daytime customers on a first come/first serve basis. On busy days and holidays you should anticipate a wait of at least 30 minutes. We also do not add names to our waitlist over the phone, so you must come in to get on the list. We do, however, take dinner reservations.
Can you eat at the bar?
Yes, we have a full bar with full service. The complete menu is available there.
Can I walk in for dinner without a reservation?
Yes, we always save tables for walk ins
What if I need to cancel, is there a fee?
Please cancel any reservation with as much notice as possible. We DO charge a fee for no-shows of $25 per person. With such a small dining room, we rely on the timeliness of our reservation system and appreciate as much notice as we can get for cancellations or even if you're running late. Thank you!
Do you have a patio?
Yes, weather permitting.
Are you able to accommodate vegetarians, vegans, gluten-free diets, or other dietary restrictions?
Yes, we can handle any sort of food allergy or dietary preferences. Our entire staff is adept at providing guests with a dining experience that showcases the best of our food while also meeting their needs. We take food allergies very seriously.
Do you have parking?
There is metered street parking directly in front of the restaurant. If full, there are usually more spots available down the block.
Can we bring our own wine or cake?
We have a full wine list and dessert menu, but we do allow guests to bring wine or cake if they’d like. We charge a $25 corkage fee for wines and a $3 fee for each piece of cake we slice.
Are you kid friendly?
We are certified Kid Friendly and love welcoming people of all ages into our space. We have a special menu for kids with several food options and coloring activities.
Do you give out donation gift cards?
Yes, we do. Please submit donation requests via email to eat@lulacafe.com.
Are you ADA accessible?
Our restaurant is on the ground level with no stairs and ADA
compliant bathrooms. Please see our full
Accessibility Statement.
Do you allow dogs on your patio?
Yep! They must be leashed and kept out of the walkway. But we love dogs!
Service charge and tips
At Lula a 20% service charge is added to pay employees a fair living wage and benefits. A service charge model helps us provide a consistent income for all members of our team in a way that the old tip system did not.
We’ve decided to keep a gratuity line on our checks because many folks have asked if they can leave a little something extra. Of course, that’s super nice and we’re grateful and we can ensure you that any additional gratuity goes straight to the service team.
Why a service fee?
We’ve chosen a fixed service fee of 20% for several
reasons.
First, we want to provide fair and consistent
wages for all of our staff. Working for tips means that some
shifts are good for your favorite server and some slow shifts
barely bring in minimum wage. In order for our staff to live
healthy and secure lives, we provide them with a fixed and
dependable income.
Second, with a service fee we can
pay our kitchen staff fairly and provide benefits for all. In a
tipped system, the customary 18-20% comes in as revenue only for
the service team. It is not shareable with what is usually called
the “Back of the House.” At Lula we don’t use
that term or that system of pay because we believe in supporting
our kitchen workers with a higher-than-average wage and we
don’t think they are in “back” of anything. When
we reopened after the pandemic, adding a service fee helped us to
increase the average wage of the kitchen worker by more than
25%.
Third, tipping has roots in racist, post-Civil War
labor laws that allowed white Americans the right to pay Black
Americans less than the federal minimum wage. In working on this
project we’ve learned that many people of color in the U.S.
are still regularly being paid less than the minimum wage, which
is completely illegal but which the labor department does not have
the resources to investigate. This issue disproportionately harms
black and brown women.
And lastly, while most of our
customers are super terrific, of course, not all tippers treat
servers with the respect they deserve, especially when it comes to
men tipping women. There’s just too much judgement based on
criteria other than the work. Looks, smiles, little extras.
It’s simply not a safe space if your wage depends on
anything but how well you do your job.
Are you against tips then?
No, we are opposed to the sub-minimum wage and the reliance on tips as compensation in our industry, and the impact this system has then on the lives of workers. Frankly, sometimes tips can be very nice to get. We have decided to keep the tip line on all our checks in the event that a guest really loves their experience and wants to show the service team some love. Any tip left here goes directly to the servers and their support staff.
Why is the service fee taxed?
Because the IRS and state taxing authorities does not consider a service fee to be an optional gratuity, the 20% fee is considered business income, unlike a tip. We pay 10.75 percent state tax on all income, including the service fee. Until the IRS changes its understanding of such service fees it will continue to be taxed according to the state tax rate, same as any food or beverage.
How do I know this service fee isn’t just going into the pockets of the owners?
The service-fee system is definitely not a smart move for profits. Service fees don’t come close to covering the wages and benefits we provide, never mind leaving money to go toward the ownership. The system in the U.S. is simply stacked against restaurants like ours trying to pay higher-than-average wages to all. Because our service fee is categorized as income while tips are not, we pay taxes on the fee while facing increased operational costs. And because we are not relying on tips to pay the wages of service staff, we are actually forgoing a U.S. federal tax rebate for employers who pay sub-minimum wages (yes, that's a thing). All in all it’s considerably more expensive to pay our staff a fixed hourly wage. We’ll be happy to break this down further for you in case you’d like to know how our labor budget has been adversely impacted by our switch to this system.
Why not just raise your prices then?
Lula is in an extreme minority with the adoption of this
service-fee system (although there are more adoptees every day),
and we feel that raising our prices 20% would place us too far out
of competition with our peers. We are already not a cheap
restaurant—and not just because of our wages. We buy the
best products; we staff generously; we give benefits and paid time
off and parental leave. We compost, choose compostable to-go
containers, and source pastured eggs from a local farm. All this
means we are already a pretty pricey place despite being so casual
in many ways.
The real truth here is that food in the
US is deeply undervalued in general and also provided very
inequitably across the social classes. The wealthy pay far, far
too little of their income on food as a percentage. The working
class are shut out of healthy and accessible choices.
So
we’ve decided that raising prices is not the way to go.
Plus, if we increased prices and kept the old tip system, it would
mean higher tips going to just the servers and support staff and
not the kitchen, which increases inequity and leaves the kitchen
staff at less than livable wages.