NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
A frustrated waitress recently went viral for venting about a refund fraud method that she said has become the norm.
The restaurant worker, who goes by @girlypopzonly on TikTok, said the grift began after she served two entrées and two drinks to a couple.
In a TikTok video recorded from the eatery's kitchen, the waitress recalled that she got an unpleasant reaction when she checked on the pair.
SWEET DECEPTION? LOYAL CUSTOMERS ACCUSE ICONIC DESSERT CHAIN OF 'SHRINKFLATION'
"The girl's like, 'This [burger] is nasty, I don't want it,'" the waitress said in a video that got over 54,000 likes.
"Mind you, the burger's half-eaten. All the fries are gone. So she gives me half [of] our burger back."

A waitress (not pictured) in a popular TikTok video recently complained about two customers constantly returning their food. (iStock)
She added, "I'm like, 'You know what? That's fine. She liked the fries.' So I take it back. Take it off the bill."
When the waitress politely asked her if she'd like anything else, the female customer said she wanted the shrimp pasta that the male customer was enjoying.
The waitress agreed, brought back the new dish and checked back in on the pair – and got another complaint, this time from the male customer.
"They paid 20 bucks in total, and they ate seven different meals."
"And then the guy's like, 'I don't like my shrimp pasta,'" the waitress said.
"Mind you, the shrimp pasta's half gone. There's three noodles on the [expletive] plate. And I'm, like, 'Oh, that's weird, but OK.' I'm going to obviously take it off the bill."
THIS CHEAP PANTRY STAPLE COULD BE KEY TO LOWERING CHOLESTEROL, NEW RESEARCH SUGGESTS
And then – making the story even more interesting – the female customer complained about her mostly-eaten shrimp pasta.

The server (not pictured), who goes by @girlypopzonly on TikTok, said she kept refunding the couple's food to no avail. (iStock)
She vented, "I'm like, 'OK, that's weird. This is, like, the seventh plate you guys have ordered.' They've returned every single plate, but they ate almost all of it. This is not a buffet, by the way."
The waitress complied — and the manager also took the last dish off the bill.
"They're sitting there laughing at me every time I pass by," the TikTok creator said. "They paid, like, 20 bucks in total, and they ate seven different meals."
For more Lifestyle articles, visit foxnews.com/lifestyle
She wrote on social media, "I'm just wondering, is that normal? When you guys go to restaurants, do you order a bunch of meals, then return [them]? Why is this the norm? This happens so much."
The troubled service worker received an outpouring of sympathy and support in the video's comments section, which drew over 1,600 reactions to the stunt.

The debacle included two servings of shrimp pasta (not seen here) that the customers kept making complaints about. (Emma Essence)
"Restaurants aren't tasting menus," one user wrote.
"We have to stop allowing people to get away with stuff like that," another remarked.
"If more than half of the meal is gone, no refund."
The video also fueled a debate about whether restaurants should be refunding eaten food at all.
"If more than half of the meal is gone, no refund," a commenter asserted.
"When I worked at restaurants, the rule was if it was cooked wrong or not as described/ordered - refund," one former service worker said.
"Otherwise they got what they ordered. We'd maybe give a discount or free drink/dessert."
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER
Others were firm that eaten food should never be refunded.
"Nothing should have been taken off the bill," one person wrote.

The waitress (not pictured) in the viral TikTok video complained that the "eat-and-return" refund method has become all too common in her restaurant. (iStock)
Overall, a majority of commenters disapproved of the waitress being put into the situation and said the restaurant's manager should have been more involved.
"That's your manager's fault," someone wrote.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
"My manager would've had a field day with them," another commenter said.