Add the items. Share the link. Friends claim what they ordered. BillSplitterApp divides tax, tip, and fees proportionally.
BillSplitterApp is a free, account-free tool for splitting a shared receipt fairly. One person enters the bill, shares a private link, and everyone else claims the items they actually ordered. Tax, tip, and any fees are split proportionally based on each person's share of the subtotal — so the person who ordered the steak and a cocktail pays more of the extras than the person who had a salad and water.
It is built for restaurant checks where the server can only run one card, group dinners with mixed orders, takeout and delivery, and any situation where one person fronts the bill and needs to collect from a group without doing receipt math by hand.
There are no accounts to create, no app to download, and nothing to install. Open the site, enter the bill, send the link.
Type the items in, or scan the receipt. Add tax, tip, and any fees from the receipt.
Send your friends the private bill link. No accounts, no downloads — they just open it in a browser.
Each person claims what they ordered. BillSplitterApp shows their total with tax and tip included.
See the longer walkthrough in How it works.
When orders are different sizes and an even split feels off.
One person pays; the group settles up after with the right totals.
Keep alcohol with the people who actually ordered it.
Split each shared item between the people who actually shared it.
Why even-splitting the extras quietly hurts the payer.
Which payment app to default to, and when to mix them.
Browse all bill splitting guides.
More answers in the FAQ, or get in touch on the contact page.
Every group has at least one bill story. The birthday dinner where the check landed and nobody could figure out who owed what. The road trip where one friend ended up floating $1,200 on their credit card for six weeks. The roommate house where "someone will buy paper towels" quietly meant the same person for eight months in a row.
BillSplitterApp exists for one narrow reason: to make the math after a group bill so easy that nobody argues, nobody under-pays, and nobody gets stuck.
Fair does not always mean equal. A four-person dinner where one person had cocktails and steak and another had a salad and water isn't fair when it gets split evenly — the salad eater ends up quietly funding the cocktail drinker. Fair usually means proportional: everyone pays for what they ordered, plus their proportional share of tax, tip, and fees.
That's the entire idea behind the tool. One person enters the bill. Everyone else opens a link and claims the items they actually had. The math handles itself — no spreadsheets, no receipt photos in the group chat, no "just Venmo me later."
The tool is built for the moments where a casual even-split would quietly cost someone real money:
Every other bill-splitter asks you to sign up, and most ask your friends to sign up too. That's fine when you're splitting rent with the same person every month; it's overkill for a one-off dinner where five friends just need to know what they owe.
BillSplitterApp works from a link. The payer creates the bill; everyone else opens the link and claims. Nobody needs an account. Nobody's data gets sold. The bill is stored long enough for everyone to settle, then it's just a URL that's easy to delete.
Not every bill needs an app. If you'd rather understand the math or the etiquette:
No accounts. No spreadsheets. Just a link.