Split Bills & Settle Up | No More Tabletop Math 🍺
Split group costs for dinners, trips, or shared gifts in seconds. Use weighted ratios to account for heavy spenders or late arrivals, then find the fastest way to pay everyone back.
💡 How It Works
Stop doing mental gymnastics at the end of a meal. This tool handles complex splits where "even division" doesn't cut it. Assign weights—like 1.5x for the person who ordered steak or 0.5x for the friend who arrived late—and let the algorithm calculate the exact breakdown. It even simplifies multiple reimbursements so you can settle up with the fewest transactions possible.
📘 Pro Tips
- Adjust Contributions by Weight
Use sliders to fine-tune who pays what. Set a baseline at "1.0," then scale up for big spenders or down for light eaters. The tool re-calculates every share instantly. - Round Your Totals
Round to the nearest $1, $10, or $100. Rounding up is a great way to create a "buffer" for tips or to seed a future group fund. - Simplify Group Debts
Eliminate endless Venmo loops. If Alice paid for dinner and Bob paid for the rental car, enter both totals. The tool identifies the most efficient way to get everyone square. - Share the Breakdown
Copy the final results with one click and drop them directly into WhatsApp, Slack, or iMessage.
🧐 FAQ
- What happens if I round down?
Rounding down may leave a small remaining balance (usually a few cents). The organizer typically covers this, or you can switch to "Round Up" to ensure the full bill is covered. - How does the settlement optimization work?
The tool uses a "Greedy Algorithm" to minimize the total number of transfers, ensuring guests pay the largest debts to the largest creditors first. - Is there a limit to the group size?
No. Whether it’s a coffee date or a 20-person corporate retreat, the math stays accurate.
📚 Trivia
The term "Go Dutch" dates back to 17th-century political rivalries, but today, splitting the bill is the global standard for fairness. Using a splitter prevents "money stress" and keeps social outings focused on the experience, not the invoice.