Best way is just to see what everyone else is doing. I play in a few different venues and this is how they generally work.
Self dealt tournament, dealers are tipped a set amount, normally 10% of a buy in.
House dealt tournament, no tips for house dealers.
Self dealt cash game, dealers are tipped when you win a decent pot.
House dealt cash game, no tips as you"ve paid session fee"s or rakes.
I think with the law change in september gaming staff can legally accept tips, but most of the casino"s have banned it for obvious reasons.
If the games are self dealt there are no dealers surely? Hence Self dealt.
I have to say I"m a little puzzled as to how this works?
So you start a £100 "self deal" tournament and 1 player volunteers to do all the dealing on your table... do you then tip him 10% of the buy-in? And presumably expect others at the table to also do like wise?
I can"t see that this is how works?
Does he just get one 10% buy-in tip? Who pays it and when?
If you deal on what turns out to be the first table broken you may only deal for a fraction of the time that someone else deals on another table, do you all get tipped the same?
I have to say I have never played in a "self deal" tourney where there was ever any suggestion of tipping any of the dealers.
To get back to the original question...
Most (large chain) casinos still don"t allow dealers to accept tips, however it has become customary for those that cash to leave something "for the valets". Now whether or not any of this money fiinds it"s way to the dealers I don"t know, but it is definitely a bit of a sore point for me personally since the valet service is generally appalling in regular casinos. Don"t get me wrong, it"s not that the valets themselves are necessarily bad, just that the poker rooms never have enough valets serving them. In any case when I do actually get a drink I always tip the valet there and then, so I won"t be voluntarily leaving any extra from my tournament winnings (if ever actually get any!!)
Another thing I don"t like is pooled tips for dealers (cash games now). A tip, a gratuity, is something you should be giving for good service. If a dealer is pleasant, efficient and enhances my time at the table they will get better tips and even if I haven"t had many winning hands I"ll tip them when they leave the table, if they are miserable, sit there quiet, without so much as a smile or even worse, continually sit and chat exclusively to one local player, then they won"t be retiring on my tips.