06/06/2026
I walked into a fast-food spot today and was stopped in my tracks by a sign at the register.
"Water cups are now fifty cents. No free cups. Non-negotiable."
They are charging for water. Technically, theyāre charging for the cup, but thatās a distinction without a difference. The water comes from the same fountain everyone else uses; the only thing standing between a customer and a drink of water is now a fifty-cent fee for the paper vessel required to hold it.
I know the common defense: "Cups cost money," or "People abuse it by filling them with soda." Iāve heard the excuses. But letās be honest about what this really is.
Water is the most fundamental offering a food establishment can provide. Itās what you offer someone who feels faint. Itās what a parent requests for a thirsty child. Itās what someone asks for when they can't afford a meal but want to sit with friends who are eating. Water is the absolute baseline of human hospitality, and it costs a business virtually nothing to provide.
Charging for it isn't about the cup. Itās about a business deciding there is no longer any gesture too small to monetizeāthat even water, the absolute floor of what you offer a guest, must carry a price tag.
Itās the precedent that bothers me. Fifty cents is a small amount, sure, but itās the principle. Itās a business looking at the last truly free thing and deciding, not even that.
Think about who that charge actually stops. Not most people, but some. The kid counting change. The person down to their last dollar who just needed a drink. A fifty-cent charge quietly turns those people away.
I donāt believe water should ever cost money in a place that sells food. I left without buying anything. A business that charges for a cup of water has told me exactly what kind of establishment it is.