📅This fact may be outdated

La Petite Syrah in Nice, France did implement this three-tiered politeness pricing system starting in 2013, which became internationally famous. However, the café is now permanently closed according to multiple review platforms (Yelp, Foursquare). The fact uses present tense but should be past tense since the establishment no longer operates.

There's a café in France which charges €7 for a coffee to rude customers and €1.40 to people who talk politely to staff.

The French Café That Charged Rude Customers €7 for Coffee

2k viewsPosted 11 years agoUpdated 1 hour ago

In 2013, a small café in Nice, France decided to tackle the eternal problem of rude customers with a brilliantly French solution: charge them more money. La Petite Syrah posted a chalkboard sign that broke down coffee prices into three tiers based entirely on politeness.

Bark "un café" at the counter without any pleasantries? That'll be €7 (about $9.50). Add a "s'il vous plaît" (please) and the price drops to €4.25. But greet the staff with a proper "bonjour, un café, s'il vous plaît" and you'd pay just €1.40—the actual price of the coffee.

The Politeness Experiment That Went Viral

Owner Fabrice Pepino noticed customers were increasingly stressed and curt during busy lunch hours. The tiered pricing sign started as a tongue-in-cheek joke, a gentle reminder that basic manners cost nothing. He never actually charged anyone more than €1.40—the threat alone was enough.

The response was immediate. Customers started smiling more, greeting staff, and treating the transaction as a human interaction rather than a vending machine experience. The story went viral internationally, sparking conversations about customer service culture and whether other businesses should adopt similar systems.

Why It Worked (and What It Says About Us)

The genius wasn't in punishment—it was in making rudeness visible. Most people don't realize how they come across when they're rushed or distracted. The sign created a moment of self-awareness: Am I really going to walk up and demand coffee like a barbarian?

It also flipped the typical service dynamic. Instead of "the customer is always right," it established mutual respect as the baseline. Service workers aren't NPCs in your daily quest; they're humans who appreciate a "hello."

The café became a minor tourist attraction, with visitors stopping by specifically to experience the politeness pricing. Some cafés in other countries experimented with similar concepts, though none achieved quite the same cultural moment.

The Aftermath

Unfortunately, La Petite Syrah has since closed. While the café itself is gone, its legacy lives on in countless articles, social media debates, and the occasional business that tries its own version of kindness-based pricing.

The experiment proved something important: most people, when given a gentle nudge, will choose kindness. Sometimes all it takes is a chalkboard and a sense of humor to remind us that please and thank you still matter—even if we're just ordering coffee.

Frequently Asked Questions

Did the French café really charge rude customers more?
The sign was posted as a humorous reminder, but owner Fabrice Pepino admitted he never actually charged anyone more than €1.40 (the standard coffee price). The threat alone was enough to improve customer behavior.
What was the name of the café in France with politeness pricing?
La Petite Syrah, located at 13 rue Cassini in Nice, France. The café gained international attention in 2013 for its three-tiered pricing based on customer manners, though it has since closed.
How much did coffee cost at La Petite Syrah?
The actual price was always €1.40, but the sign showed €7 for "un café" (just ordering coffee), €4.25 for "un café, s'il vous plaît" (coffee please), and €1.40 for "bonjour, un café, s'il vous plaît" (hello, a coffee, please).
Is La Petite Syrah café still open?
No, La Petite Syrah in Nice, France is permanently closed according to Yelp and Foursquare. The café gained fame in 2013-2014 but is no longer in operation.
Why did the French café charge based on politeness?
Owner Fabrice Pepino noticed customers were increasingly rude during busy hours. The tiered pricing sign was meant as a lighthearted reminder about manners, and it successfully encouraged more respectful interactions without ever being enforced.

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