10 Things Elegant Women Never Do At A Restaurant (That Everyone Else Thinks Is Fine)
The small, socially acceptable habits that quietly undermine your presence at the table.

There are certain dining habits we all recognize instantly.
Being rude to a server, chewing with your mouth open, and speaking loudly enough for the entire restaurant to hear your conversation are all obvious. No one is confused about them.
The more interesting missteps are the ones that pass without comment. The ones that feel completely normal and yet shift the tone of the table in a way you can feel, even if you can’t quite name it.
The way you show up at a table reveals a lot about the way you show up in life. Elegant women understand this in a way that feels instinctive rather than rigid or performative.
Here are ten habits an elegant woman never does at a restaurant, even though most people think they're perfectly fine.
1. Pointing (At the Menu or Anything Else)
Pointing is common. It is also rude.

It may not seem like a big deal, but whether you're pointing at your menu, toward your server, or across the room, it comes across as abrupt and impersonal. An elegant woman uses her words. She names what she would like, makes eye contact, and keeps the interaction human.
2. Announcing an Order Instead of Requesting It
“I’ll have the salmon.”
This is efficient and widely accepted, but it lands more like a statement than a request.
There’s something noticeably more polished about softening the delivery into a question instead of a demand.
“May I have the salmon, please?” or “I would love the salmon.”
It’s technically the same order, but it lands very differently.
3. Commenting on Prices, Even Casually
“This is so expensive.”
“That’s actually a great deal.”

It often slips out without much thought, but it subtly changes the feeling at the table. Commenting on price shifts the focus from the experience to the bill, and if you weren't the one who chose the restaurant, it can make whoever did feel awkward, whether you're implying it's too expensive or not impressive enough.
4. Keeping a Handbag on Display at the Table
A beautiful bag can feel like part of the outfit, but that doesn't make the table the place for it.
When a handbag is placed on the table or kept prominently on display, it interrupts the setting and draws attention away from the shared space.
An elegant woman doesn't need her accessories to take up space to be noticed. She places her bag on the back of her chair or somewhere discreet and lets the company she keeps remain the focus.
5. Wearing Sunglasses or Treating Them Like a Hair Accessory
Sunglasses have a way of lingering. Worn on top of the head, resting beside your plate, or going on and off throughout the meal.

Indoors, especially at a restaurant, they can give the impression that you have something to hide, that you feel superior to those in your presence, or that you're not fully open or present.
An elegant woman removes them when she arrives and puts them away without a second thought.
6. Touching Up Makeup at the Table
A quick lipstick reapplication can feel harmless. Efficient, even, but it shifts the table from a shared space to a personal one. It can even come across as if fixing your appearance is more of a priority than being present at the table.
Elegance often involves a bit of restraint. A sense that not everything needs to be done in full view. It's about leaving some things to the imagination.
7. Oversharing Personal Details
Some conversations take a turn quickly, and not always in a direction that serves the table.
There's nothing wrong with being open—vulnerability can be beautiful, and real friendships are built on honest conversation. But a restaurant, especially early in a meal, isn't always the right container for heavy disclosures. Launching into health struggles, financial stress, or relationship drama before the appetizers arrive can shift the mood in ways that are hard to recover from.

An elegant woman has a sense for what’s appropriate in a given moment. She knows the difference between a dinner where that kind of depth is welcome and one where lightness is what the moment calls for. She keeps conversation warm, curious, and inclusive—drawing people in rather than burdening them. She's aware that how a meal feels is something she has a hand in creating, and she takes that seriously.
8. Holding Stemware by the Bowl
It seems like a small detail, and yet it's one people notice more than you'd expect.
Stemmed glassware is designed to be held by the stem for a reason. When you wrap your hand around the bowl, the warmth of your palm raises the temperature of the drink, which matters especially for white wine and champagne. It also leaves fingerprints across the glass, which isn't a great look against the light.
Holding by the stem keeps the drink at the right temperature, the glass looking clean, and your grip looking effortless. It's a small habit that signals you're someone who pays attention.
9. Interrupting or Talking Over Others
Enthusiasm can easily turn into interruption. Some interruption is natural and actually makes others feel like you’re really interested in what they have to say, but only to a point.

When you jump in mid-sentence, finish someone else’s thought, or redirect to some other topic before they’re done, it can come across as dominating the conversation or being more interested in hearing yourself talk than listening to what others have to say.
Elegant women understand that conversation is shared. They let others finish and respond with intention.
10. Defaulting to Your Phone
A quick glance at a notification isn’t the end of the world, but when your phone is sitting face up on the table, it pulls your attention away from the moment.
It’s become so normalized, but it signals that your attention is elsewhere and that whatever is on your phone is more important or interesting than who you're sitting with.
An elegant woman is fully present, and that presence is what people remember.

None of this is about being perfect or calculated. It comes down to how you participate in a shared experience, how you carry yourself, and how you make other people feel.
Once you start paying attention to these small details, you see them everywhere. Not to judge them, but to understand how easily the tone of a table can shift.
And how just as easily, it can be elevated, too.
If you have a question for a future Ask Alison segment, kindly email info@elevateetiquette.com.
Alison M. Cheperdak, J.D., is a bestselling author, internationally certified etiquette coach, and the founder of Elevate Etiquette. She is the author of Was It Something I Said? Everyday Etiquette to Avoid Awkward Moments in Relationships, Work, and Life (HarperCollins, 2026).