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The 5 ways to split an expense (and when to use each)

Splitting equally is rarely the fairest option. Here are the 5 ways to split an expense — equally, by amounts, by percentages, by shares, item-by-item — and when to use each.

The Donget team 3 min read

Most expense apps give you one tool: split it equally. And for a coffee run, that’s fine. But real life isn’t always equal. One person didn’t drink, two people shared the big plate, somebody’s covering a guest. Force every cost into an even split and someone always ends up quietly subsidising someone else.

The fix is to match the split to the situation. Donget gives you five ways to split an expense, and once you know when to reach for each, “fair” stops being a debate.

1. Split equally

The default, and the right choice surprisingly often. Everyone pays the same share.

Use it when the cost genuinely benefits everyone the same way: the group taxi, a shared streaming subscription, the rental car that everyone rides in.

Skip it when people consumed clearly different amounts. “We’ll just split it” is the phrase that breeds quiet resentment when one person had a salad and another had the steak and two cocktails.

2. Split by exact amounts

You type in exactly what each person owes. The shares don’t have to add up evenly — they just have to add up to the total.

Use it when you already know the breakdown: a hotel where one person had the suite, a bill where someone is paying for their own add-on, or any cost where the numbers are simply known.

The fairest split isn’t the most even one. It’s the one that matches what people actually used.

3. Split by percentages

Each person takes a percentage of the total. Handy when the split is proportional rather than itemised.

Use it when there’s an agreed ratio: housemates splitting rent 60/40 because one room is much larger, a couple sharing costs in proportion to income, or business partners dividing a joint expense by ownership stake.

4. Split by shares

Instead of percentages, you assign “shares” — like 2 shares to the couple and 1 share to the single friend. The app does the division.

Use it when counting heads is easier than doing percentages. A villa where a couple takes one room (2 shares) and solo travellers take theirs (1 share each) splits cleanly without anyone reaching for a calculator. It’s also perfect for family trips where kids count as a half-share.

5. Split item-by-item

The most precise option: you assign individual line items to the people who had them. The steak goes to one person, the shared starter gets split, the dessert two people ordered goes to those two.

Use it when a single bill contains very different orders — the classic restaurant cheque where everyone ate something different. Combine it with free AI receipt scanning: snap the receipt, and assign items straight from the scanned list.

A quick decision guide

  • Everyone benefited equally → equally
  • You know the exact numbers → by exact amounts
  • There’s an agreed ratio → by percentages
  • Some people count for more → by shares
  • One bill, different orders → item-by-item

Why having all five matters

An app that only splits equally forces you to do the awkward math yourself — or to let small unfairnesses slide until they add up. Having all five methods means every Expense gets divided the way it actually happened, so the Balances are always something the whole group can look at and agree with.

That’s the real goal. Not perfect decimals, but a split nobody has to argue about.

Want to split every expense the right way? Download Donget free and try all five. See them in action on the features page, or read how it handles a group trip.

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