humuloneranger wrote:But the thing that put me over the edge when I got my tab was this: draft prices do not include tax, and nowhere on the menu is this spelled out. Suddenly that $6 pint of Metropolitan Iron Works is closer to $7. I can't recall ever going to a bar that pulled this.
Hopped Up wrote:Hopleaf changed their draft prices to not including tax a year or so ago and now tax is added to the draft list price. It's disclosed on the menu, but plenty of bars add tax to the draft list price.
humuloneranger wrote:Evanston could really use another quality beer destination.
Maybe this is an Evanston regulation. On the occasions when I have attended a music concert at SPACE, I had time for one or two beers afterward in Union Pizzeria, and its price is exclusive of tax.milz50 wrote: The audacity of them to charge tax and not explicitly disclose it. Really - you've never been to a bar whose draft prices were exclusive of tax?
pudgym29 wrote:Maybe this is an Evanston regulation. On the occasions when I have attended a music concert at SPACE, I had time for one or two beers afterward in Union Pizzeria, and its price is exclusive of tax.milz50 wrote: The audacity of them to charge tax and not explicitly disclose it. Really - you've never been to a bar whose draft prices were exclusive of tax?
In Chicago, Villains Bar @ 649 S. Clark St. does not include taxes on its beer prices. (But I have not been there in 1¼ years.)
pudgym29 wrote:Maybe this is an Evanston regulation. On the occasions when I have attended a music concert at SPACE, I had time for one or two beers afterward in Union Pizzeria, and its price is exclusive of tax.milz50 wrote: The audacity of them to charge tax and not explicitly disclose it. Really - you've never been to a bar whose draft prices were exclusive of tax?
In Chicago, Villains Bar @ 649 S. Clark St. does not include taxes on its beer prices. (But I have not been there in 1¼ years.)
The World of Beer is spinning into downtown Chicago. The craft-beer restaurant chain is expanding beyond its two suburban locations in Naperville and Evanston into the city, where it plans five more, said Evanston investor Ted Mavrakis, who owns the franchise rights for the chain in Illinois.