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How To Split A Restaurant Bill

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The simplest case: even split

The check lands in the middle of the table, someone pulls out a phone, and ten minutes later a group of grown adults is still arguing about whether the appetizers count. Splitting a restaurant bill fairly is a surprisingly rich math problem — tip before or after tax, per-item vs even split, how to handle a shared bottle of wine while one person drank water. This guide walks through the clean math and the social-math overlay that matters just as much.

Tip before or after tax?

Four people, $120 food, $10 tax, $26 tip (20% pre-tax). Total $156 ÷ 4 = $39 per person. Takes ten seconds, and — on a bill where everyone ate comparably — it’s the fairest option. Getting precise to the penny wastes far more time than any $2 difference matters.

By-item (itemized) splits

In practice, the easy-to-compute shortcut of “double the tax” (which gives you tip in many US states) is tipping on post-tax numbers. It’s fine — servers don’t mind — but it’s a slightly higher tip than 20% pre-tax.

Shared items, one person abstains

When the table has big spread — a steak, a salad, three people who shared an entrée, one person who ordered wine and another who drank water — even-splitting charges the water-drinker for everyone else’s fun. Itemize.

Different tip rates per person

Classic case: a bottle of wine for the table, one person is pregnant or driving and had water. The socially-correct move is to exclude the wine from that person’s share. Subtract the wine from the subtotal, split the remainder however is otherwise appropriate, then split the wine only among the drinkers.

Credit card surcharges and split-payment friction

Doing this silently is the right move. The abstaining person shouldn’t have to negotiate it out loud mid-dinner. One person at the table does the math and announces per-person totals that already bake in the correction.

Rounding and the “nobody has a penny” problem

Sometimes one member of the group wants to leave 25% because the service was exceptional, and another thinks 18% is the ceiling. This gets awkward fast. The cleanest version: announce the group tip before splitting (typically 20%), and let the over-tipper drop extra cash on the table privately. Mixing tip rates in the per-item math is doable but stops being worth it on any bill under $500.

The social rule that makes it easier

Many restaurants pass along a ~3% surcharge for credit-card payments. If the group is paying across cards, that surcharge applies to each transaction individually and compounds. Four cards, each hit with a 3% surcharge on their portion, is still 3% of the total — but if one person is picking up cash from others and putting the whole bill on their card, they eat 3% of the full total while the cash-payers got off clean. A $2 card-surcharge gap isn’t worth fighting about, but it’s worth understanding why the math feels off.

The 30-second approach

$39.47 per person is a terrible answer because nobody’s going to hand over $0.47 and track which person gets the short stack of quarters. Round up. $40 per person on a $156.47 bill over-pays by $3.53, which becomes a slightly bigger tip for the server — a good problem to have. The calculator shows both the precise and rounded-up amounts so you can pick.