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-   -   How to split the costs w/travel partner (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/how-to-split-the-costs-w-travel-partner-389657/)

Barb Jan 20th, 2004 11:30 AM

How to split the costs w/travel partner
 
I will be traveling with a friend to France/Italy in Sept. This is always a sticky subject and I would be interested in how others have handled it. You have a nice dinner, the bill comes - do you try to figure out what you had, what she had, etc. and pay separately - can you ask the waiter for separate checks? Does one pay and the other reimburses? I can see pitfalls with all of the above. I've heard some people put cash in a pool and draw from that every day for meals, transportation or groceries - anything that is shared. But what if one person always orders 3 courses and good wine and the other only has salad and house wine? What if one wants to pay in cash and one only a credit card. I'm sure this has to come up with other people traveling with friends. I would appreciate your ideas on this.

Anonymous Jan 20th, 2004 11:36 AM

When my sister and I travel together, we keep track of each joint expenditure, who paid for it, and then at the end of the trip we total it all up, divide by two, and one of us owes the other a little bit. No need to figure out every single transaction! I suppose if one of you is consistently eating far more expensively than the other, this might not work.

Kate Jan 20th, 2004 11:40 AM

Well everyone is different with regards to money and how penny pinching they want to be, so my method may not suit you or your friend.

I travel frequently with friends and tend to follow this method: at the start of our trip (when we arrive at the airport for example), we'll both go to an ATM and draw the same amount of money. We'll do this as many times as necessary during the trip, always drawing the same. From then on, we spend from whoever has their purse most handy (ie I'll get this cab, you get that train ticket) until the money runs out. If there's money left over then we split it, knowing we've both spent the same amount.

If we pay by credit card, we simply check our statements when we return and settle the difference. Also in restaurants, if there's only 2 of you, then it's perfectlty acceptable to ask the waiter to split the bill over 2 cards (equally, that is).

One major difference from what you're suggesting, however, if that we NEVER haggle over who had what at dinner. To be honest, where I'm from (London) it's not quite the done thing. If you haven't had a full meal, then it's really your look out. Whenever I eat out, whether home or away, and whether with 1 person or 10, we would ALWAYS split the bill down the evenly. Trust me, you may lose a few euros this way, but you won't lose any friendships.

Whatever you decide, just make sure you agree your methods before you go, so there's no ill feeling.

eurotravler Jan 20th, 2004 11:42 AM

What has worked for us in the past while traveling with friends is to split it down the middle. We each throw some money in a "kitty" and work off that. The problem with "sticky subjects" is that they must be addressed before you leave. Sit down with your travel partners in the early stages of planning and discuss these concerns.

mclaurie Jan 20th, 2004 11:48 AM

I assume you know this friend well enough so you dine out together at home. What do you do? Do you know she (or you) always eat or drink more than the other? When I've travelled with a friend, we usually split the bill evenly either by 1 person paying by credit card with the other paying the "payor" in cash, both put in cash or-least desirable IMO- putting 2 credit cards down & asking the waiter to divide it evenly

Asking for separate checks is not, IMO, a good idea. I do have a friend who's diabetic & doesn't drink or have desserts. When I go out with her, we do calculate who had what so she doesn't wind up paying a lot for wine & desserts she didn't have. She makes it her business to have cash to pay.

chardonnay Jan 20th, 2004 11:52 AM

Barb, when I have a travel partner (who isn't my date) we put money into a kitty which is an envelope, then if there is a big difference in what we have eaten we mark it on the envelope right there and then, but never ask the waiter to write two checks, it is frowned upon, IMHO.

It usually rounds out equally at the end of the trip, sometimes one person eats or drinks more and sometimes the other one will. If she wants just to have one course, it is marked on the paper. I always order better wine by the bottle and sometimes I back down and we get a carafe of local wine which just about evens things out.

I wasn't very clear, was I?

ellenem Jan 20th, 2004 11:56 AM

My aunt once told me: "When you eat out with friends, you split the bill evenly, since you share the pleasure of their company." This presupposes that no one in the group has money trouble. When I eat out with a large group of friends, most go along with this even-split method, but it is clear before we order that this is the plan. Sometimes one person will throw in more money, saying "Oh, I had more than you."

In another case, I have lunch with the same friend once every week. Sometimes it's expensive, sometimes it's cheap. We agreed to alternate paying. Over that long period of time, it seems to average out in the end.

On a recent trip to Italy, we had five in our traveling group. At our first meal, we agreed to take turns paying and settle up at the end. One person kept all the receipts, which were marked with our names. At the end we made a total, divided by five and settled our accounts with one another. ("She must pay 30 euro more; she needs 20 euro back.")

The most important factor: decide on a plan early. If it doesn't seem to be working for you, make your feelings known before things go very wrong and friendships are broken.

nytraveler Jan 20th, 2004 12:00 PM

I agree that you can't wander through Europe on the "I had the chicken salad" plan. Does one really eat twice as much as the other. Does the other never have expenses that the one doesn't. Naturally you each have to pay for your own air ticket, hotel and train or 1/2 car rental. After that it seems like madness to try to divide everything in half on the spot. When traveling with friends we just use the I got lunch you get dinner method. And it's very inappropriate to ask the restaurant to divide your bill - its not their problem to solve.

Barb Jan 20th, 2004 12:04 PM

Thanks for the responses. I have eaten with her many times and she usually eats much less than me and will only have 1 glass of wine. I certainly think my meals will be more than hers. I'm not sure the "kitty" would work. I'm thinking maybe of putting everything on my cc and then she can pay me in cash for her share. I just don't want to get into too much "bookkeeping" while on a great vacation and the "I paid for gelato, so you can pay for the taxi", which turns out to be way more than the gelato. I want us to still be friends at the end of the trip. Any other ideas?

Michael Jan 20th, 2004 12:06 PM

We have always used a common kitty when traveling with others. It covered all common expenses, such as gas, food shopping and restaurants. It has worked with three persons and with a group of 9 adults. Someone holds the kitty, and when it runs dry, the cash is replenished with each individual putting in the same amount. We did not keep track of who ordered what at a restaurant to argue that one meal cost more than another. We figured that it all evened out at the end.

SusanP Jan 20th, 2004 12:16 PM

Barb, I understand what you're saying. My mother & I were in London & Paris in Sept. My mother doesn't drink, but I enjoy wine with my dinner. There's no way I'm going to agree to just splitting it and have her always paying for half my wine. And sometimes one meal is a lot more than another. We always figured out what each of us owed. Note that in Europe, since the tax is already included in the price of each dish, it's pretty easy to figure out what each person spent. If I put it on my credit card, I just wrote in a small notebook how much my mother owed me and she paid it all at the end. Very simple, really. And nobody pays more than what they actually spent.

Marilyn Jan 20th, 2004 12:17 PM

If you know in advance your meal costs are likely to be different, then putting it all on your cc might be the easiest. But you will have to agree with her in advance on what percent of the meal she will pay -- 1/3? Also, be sure there isn't some other area in which she will consistently spend more than you do.

I have traveled a lot with friends and find a kitty is great for splitting things evenly and not having to keep track of who owes whom how much, but it doesn't work very well in your situation.

sandi Jan 20th, 2004 12:27 PM

First, this all should have been decided beforehand and agreed upon. But since it wasn't, I'm in agreement that it is best to divide everything evenly - meals, car, petrol, tolls(anything that is shared between the two of you). Each of you pays your own admissions to sites, personal purchases whether gifts or food at the local market.

The only problem comes if one person drinks and the other doesn't, or one person eats more than the other - in that instance you're going to have to keep a record and adjust at the end of the trip or adjust the difference right then with currency (Euro of USD).

Often we have paid restaurant bills, especially expensive ones, dividing evenly (and handling adjustments as above), but handing over separate credit cards. Restaurants are used to this and we've never had a problem or a "looks" when doing so.

Enjoy your trip.


jg1234 Jan 20th, 2004 12:31 PM

does she eat just a salad because a crouton fills her up or does she eat a salad because she's - how to say this delicately - frugal?

isabel Jan 20th, 2004 01:31 PM

Well I guess I and my friends are a little different than most of those who have already replied. If something is truely shared - like a taxi - then you just split it. But for meals, you just pay what you spent. Don't you look at the prices on the menu when you order? I know how much what I order cost and that's how much I pay -regardless of whether it's more or less what my friend spent. One of us might put the whole thing on a credit card and then the other will give her the cash. The next meal it might be reversed. But especially in europe where tax and tip are usually included its so easy to know what you spent. That way I don't feel cheated if she wants several drinks and I don't and she doesn't feel cheated if I want the prime rib and she just wants a salad. It isn't any "harder" than splitting down the middle. This is even what my friends and I do when we go in large groups. Everyone puts in what they think they owe and we've never not had enough to cover the bill. Usually a little extra left and then the server gets its. But definitly don't ask for seperate checks.

NYCFoodSnob Jan 20th, 2004 01:46 PM

I do whatever it takes to not let money interfere with friendship, which usually means decide on a plan (keep it simple) and put the plan on the table and come to an agreement ahead of time. I love to treat so I often spend more but I also find, in life, you get what you give.

I once met a lovely man (gay) in the pool of Two Bunch Palms (I think I've mentioned him before). He offered to fly me to Italy first class if I agreed to play tour guide. When I accepted, I made it perfectly clear we would split everything evenly and I prepared a full itinerary with every dollar budgeted. (No different than a large photo shoot.)

Once we got to Italy, I discovered he brought too much cash so I offered to pay for the hotels (I wanted the miles) and he could use his cash for our dinners (which the restaurants love). We were there for two weeks and drank and dined like true foodie-queens every night. I kept track of our expenses in my travel diary.

When I got back to NY, I tallied the total and it turned out he spent several hundred more on our dinners than I had spent on hotels. When I called him to tell him, he said to forget about it. He had such a wonderful time (so did I), he felt better paying more. Since I adore receiving gifts, I offered a very sincere thank you.

There just isn't anything more fun than the gift of generous friends.

OaktownTraveler Jan 20th, 2004 02:13 PM

Barb:

Another great question!

I ONLY travel with FRIENDS or my hubby aka bestfriend.

With my friends we are ALOT alike in many ways. We eat, we drink, we spend lots of money. We know we are lucky/blessed to not have to worry about the details of who paid what or who ate/drank what.

Most times we argue over who stole the check/bill and paid it without our knowledge.

A couple of times men who were dining nearby have "lifted" our tab!
Some of my girlfriends flirt like crazy!!!

I have learned to travel with FRIENDS ONLY. Times where a friend of a friend has joined us has been AWFUL. They don't "get" the currency "thing" between us and feel the need to blend in which causes them stress.

Year round, we buy and one another books, large gifts, clothing, shoes, theatre tickets, plane tickets and so on...
So, on a trip it would be really strange for us to start keeping track and doing all that. Kinda like packing light...whatever for???

With hubby and travel we will actually do more "accounting". He's just kooky like that.
Hubby actually examines and re-calculates EVERY bill be it for coffee or an 11 course meal at home or while we travel...drives me CRAZY.

That is in part why my friends can not do that crap around me. If they pause too long I will grab the bill and pay it in two seconds flat...

Barb, too bad we are only cyber-pals huh? GRIN

My Best,
Oaktown Traveler

Christina Jan 20th, 2004 02:45 PM

Do you expect there to be very many joint expenditures other than meals? I just wouldn't think of many unless you plan to rent cars or take taxis a lot. In those cases, of course you'd each pay half.

For meals, this is no different than going out to dinner anywhere. I and all my friends do pretty much what Isabel says. If our meals and drinks are approximately equal, sure we just divide the bill equally. It rarely is, however, and I don't think we've ever assumed it makes sense to split the bill evenly when someone has ordered expensive drinks and another hasn't, or much more expensive meals. We don't ask for separate checks because that is too much trouble, but we just mentally divide it about evenly for what we each bought and chip that money in. None of the friends I go to dinner with regularly are stingy or try to cheat anyone, so money is never short this way. IF someone doesn't have a lot of cash, one person may use their card and the other give them the approximate cash.

It really only takes a few seconds to scan the bill and figure out about what you owe by adding together in your head what you ordered plus tax (and tip if appropriate, which is easy to do mentally when 15 pct). In France, you don't even have those problems as service is included in the prices.

We don't get out calculators and add up the prices to the decimal, that's silly, but anyone should be able to quickly mentally add rounded figured of what they ordered (eg 25+5+5 is not really hard to add).

MOst of the people I know do this, I didn't think it was that unusual to actually pay for what you ate. Given that the OP's friend is the one who usually eats and drinks less, she might be skeptical of an offer to just split everything down the middle. I would be annoyed if I traveled with a friend who always ordered more than I who suggested such a thing. There isn't any real reason for it, either, unless you don't know math very well and can't add in your head easily.

Barb Jan 20th, 2004 03:49 PM

Great responses and ideas. The reason this is an important subject to me is a few years ago I traveled with my sister and it got so confusing trying to keep track of who owed who and how much and I have to say it caused a little strain. I kept track of my IOU's, but she didn't. Now that's my sister, family, ha. It might be worse with just a friend. This friend tends to do the calculator scene here at home, that would not be cool for me in a nice Parisian restaurant. I think if we both had enough cash, it would be no problem, she could pay for hers, I could pay for mine, but sometimes you don't, or all I have is a 50 euro bill scenario. Because I have an airmiles credit card, I would be willing to use my card most of the time and then I would just keep track of what her expenses were and she could reimburse me at the end of the trip. And yes, she tends to eat light, for frugal reasons. I just think if we pooled our money every day, I would end up spending more than her and then feel guilty and she would not say anything, but feel it was not fair. We have vowed to talk about all our concerns before we go (Sept) so hopefully we can come to an agreement we can both feel comfortable with. P.S. after the trip with my sis, I've travelled solo ever since and LOVE it.

chardonnay Jan 20th, 2004 04:03 PM

Barb, oh oh. Good luck.


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