Why roommates need a budget app
Living with roommates means splitting costs — rent, utilities, groceries, internet. But without a clear system, it always ends the same way: one person pays more, resentment builds, and passive-aggressive notes appear on the fridge.
A shared budget app like Plan & Multiply solves this by giving every roommate real-time visibility into shared expenses. No more "who owes what" spreadsheets. No more awkward money conversations.
The 3 expense-splitting methods for roommates
- Equal split (50/50 or 1/N): Each roommate pays the same amount. Simple and works when everyone has similar income and uses shared spaces equally.
- Proportional split: Based on income or room size. The roommate with the bigger room or higher salary pays more. Fairer when there are significant differences.
- Category-based split: Each person "owns" specific bills — one handles electricity, another handles internet. Simple to manage but can become unbalanced over time.
How to track shared groceries
Groceries are the #1 source of roommate money conflicts. The solution: create a shared "Groceries" envelope in Plan & Multiply. When anyone buys shared items, they log it in the envelope.
At month end, the app shows exactly who spent what. If Sarah spent $180 and Tom spent $120 on a $300 grocery budget, Tom owes Sarah $30 to equalize. No guessing, no arguments.
When a roommate moves in or out mid-month
Prorate the month: divide the monthly cost by 30 days, multiply by the number of days the person lived there. In Plan & Multiply, simply adjust the shared envelope amounts and add or remove the roommate from the shared budget.
Plan & Multiply vs. Splitwise/Tricount
Splitwise and Tricount are great for one-time expense splitting (dinners, trips). But they don't help you budget — they only settle debts after the fact. Plan & Multiply is a continuous budgeting tool: you see shared envelopes, remaining budgets, and your personal spending all in one place.
Think of it this way: Splitwise tells you "you owe $45." Plan & Multiply tells you "you have $12/day left to spend this week." One is reactive, the other is proactive.