NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Bartenders are discreetly telling intoxicated customers they’re cut off for the night — stirring up heated debate online.
Some workers are giving out printed cards that say, “You have been cut off,” letting patrons know they won’t be served any more alcohol, according to photos shared on social media platforms.
“Please leave quietly and no one will know,” says the message. The small cards have apparently been given out in bars in New Jersey and North Carolina.
MAN TAKES BACK TIP AFTER BEING PUBLICLY ‘SCOLDED AND HUMILIATED’ BY WAITRESS
“It has been a pleasure to serve you, but it is time to leave for the night,” the cards also say.
Social media users flooded the comments sections with thoughts.
Many people support the idea of letting customers know in a discreet but clear way they’ve been cut off from further drinks for the evening. (iStock)
Many said it avoids embarrassing people.
“If I’m getting cut off, I like the discreetness of this,” one woman wrote in a Facebook group for Boston restaurants.
“I really like this technique,” another woman said. “I’d follow the direction to the best of my ability at the time.”
RESTAURANT SURCHARGE STIRS UP CONTROVERSY: ‘BUSINESS OWNER SHOULD BE EMBARRASSED’
One man said he would “pay my bill, leave a nice tip, order an Uber.”
Sara Sandbo, owner of Fairbanks, Alaska-based Arctic Bell Designs, sells a $3 digital template for businesses to download and print.
“As a former 911 dispatcher, I’ve been on the receiving end of calls involving intoxicated customers who refused to leave, so I wanted to create a tool that could help prevent those kinds of situations,” Sandbo told Fox News Digital.

Bars and restaurants can purchase cards and card templates online, similar to the one shown here. (Sara Sandbo/Arctic Bell Designs)
But many people questioned how the card recipient would get home.
“You shouldn’t be just asking them to leave,” one woman said. “[The card] should indicate [the bar] can also help arrange a ride if they don’t have a sober one.”
BARTENDERS SPILL THE BEANS ON GEN Z’S ‘ANNOYING’ DRINK-BY-DRINK PAYMENT HABIT
Bars and restaurants are generally not required by law to ensure a drunk customer gets home safely. But some states – including New York, according to the NYC Bar Association – have “dram shop” laws that hold alcohol-serving establishments responsible if they serve alcohol to minors or to those visibly intoxicated who then cause harm.
“Someone that’s intoxicated and cut off NEEDS to be verbally told.”
Some said a card might not be enough for a person to leave.
“If you’re hammered, would you know to do the right thing?” one Facebook user wrote.
“Someone that’s intoxicated and cut off NEEDS to be verbally told,” someone wrote on Reddit.

Many people wondered how intoxicated customers would get home after being told they need to leave the bar. (iStock)
Others feared the move could anger the customer.
“I don’t like it,” a former bartender said on Facebook. “Potentially confrontational.”
Said another person, “Some will quietly leave and others will make a scene.“
Many internet users said they’d handle the situation differently.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER
“I met a nice old lady who was going through some stuff and she had too much to drink,” a Reddit user with bartending experience wrote. “I talked to her politely, asked her to drink some water and [said] I cannot serve her anymore.”
The Redditor added, “I can’t imagine slapping a card in her face. How obnoxious.”
Many agreed they would offer food or water or give the customer the check.

Some social media users expressed concern that people might get aggressive after being told they need to leave and can no longer be served. (iStock)
“As a bartender, I generally don’t use the term ‘cut off,'” one woman said on Facebook. “I politely place a water in front of them instead of the drink they ordered.”
Other bartenders, however, said they supported the gesture.
“I’m a bartender and love this,” one woman wrote on Facebook.
For more Lifestyle articles, visit foxnews.com/lifestyle
Derek Brown, a bartender and founder of Drink Company, a hospitality consulting agency in Washington, D.C., said sometimes people get intoxicated faster than others expect.
“Some people walk in and don’t seem very intoxicated,” he told Fox News Digital. “You don’t know how much they’ve already had. Then it just goes downhill.”
Bartenders try to ensure people have a great time while keeping them safe without embarrassing them, Brown added.

Some bartenders say it’s their responsibility to slow down alcohol consumption. (iStock)
“I really love that there are creative and thoughtful ways to do that,” he said.
“Apart from giving them a card, I’d suggest that, if they have a kind friend with them, you say, ‘Hey, I’ve noticed your friend has had a few too many, and we don’t want him to be frustrated or cause a scene, but it would be awesome if you guys closed out your bill and left.'”
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Fox News Digital reached out to the original posters and businesses for comment.
Similarly printed cards are sold on Amazon and can be purchased in bulk.