10 Friendly Habits Starbucks Employees Secretly Dislike

Updated: Jan. 11, 2023

See what habits customers think are OK—but Starbucks baristas secretly wish we'd all stop doing.

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Expecting the Barista to Know Your Order

Your local Starbucks baristas might have a lighthearted, friendly banter with you each time you pick up your coffee. But that doesn’t mean they’ll remember your go-to coffee order every single time. It may be a nice gesture, but nice gestures like Starbucks pay it forward lines are friendly habits baristas don’t always like.

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Interior Of Coffee Shop With Customers Using Digital Devices
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Ordering from the Secret Menu

While some Starbucks baristas don’t mind creating a secret menu masterpiece, it does take extra time. You should save those special requests for a lull, when there aren’t swarms of people waiting for their drinks. This is how baristas feel about secret menu orders.

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Fresh hot coffee being poured into a cup from a stainless steel french press in a trendy cafe
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Pouring Coffee in the Trash

Have you ever felt the hot, scorching temperature of a freshly brewed coffee from Starbucks? It may seem easier to pour a splash in the garbage to make room for milk or cream than to ask for room. But that hot coffee could burn a hole through the plastic trash bag. Not fun to clean up!

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Putting Dirty Dishes on the Bar

It’s sweet when a customer wants to corral dirty dishes for the barista, as long as they know where the dirty dishes belong. Don’t put them on the bar—look for a dish bin instead.

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Teenage girl paying for her coffee at the register. She signs the bill with her finger on the cash register tablet.
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Interrupting the Barista

You may think it’s saving the barista time when you interrupt the barista as she asks if you’d like a copy of your receipt. But cutting off a Starbucks barista is plain rude.

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An unrecognizable coffee shop customer stands across the checkout counter from an unrecognizable barista and reaches out to put a paper bill in the tips jar.
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Telling a Barista to Pocket a Tip

Yes—tips are a great way to show your barista some love! Take note that Starbucks employees share their tips, though. Their manager will collect all tips and distribute them based on hours worked at the end of each week.

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Waiting at the Counter

Baristas appreciate when a customer is listening for their name to be called. What they don’t like? A customer who crowds the hand-off counter anxiously awaiting their drink. See what Starbucks employees won’t tell you.

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Woman showing a cashier which cookies she wants to purchase.
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Not Asking for a Specific Food Item

Don’t vaguely point in the general direction of the food display case in Starbucks and say something along the lines of, “I’ll have one of those!” It’s a lot easier for the barista (who is behind the counter) when you specify the exact name of the pastry or sandwich you’re ordering.

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Friendly black waitress asking female customer her name to write on her coffee to go cup while smiling
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Asking “Is That My Drink?”

Starbucks baristas take extra time to write their customers’ names on the cups to make it as easy as possible for a person to find their drink.

Pro Tip: If you didn’t order a venti coconutmilk latte, then the venti coconutmilk latte your barista placed on the hand-off counter is probably not yours.

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A smiling female coffee shop barista stands behind the checkout counter across from an unrecognizable patron. She looks down as she writes his order on a coffee cup.
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Spelling Your Name Out Loud

If a Starbucks barista needs to clarify your name from another customer’s, they’ll ask. Otherwise, taking time out of their busy day to make sure your name is spelled correctly does just that—takes up more time.

This is how to order at Starbucks like a regular.