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Financial Communication 8 min read Intermediate April 2026

Splitting Bills Fairly Based on Income

When partners earn different amounts, rent and groceries don’t split evenly—and that’s okay. Here’s how to divide expenses without resentment building up.

Two people at a table reviewing bills and rent documents with calculator
Victoria Lam, Senior Financial Counselor

Victoria Lam

Senior Financial Counselor & Couples Money Coach

Senior Financial Counselor with 14 years of experience helping Hong Kong couples build healthier money relationships through structured communication and fair expense-sharing frameworks.

Why Equal Splits Don’t Always Work

Split the rent 50/50. Divide groceries equally. Sounds fair on paper. But when one partner earns HK$25,000 per month and the other makes HK$45,000, a 50/50 split means very different things for each person’s budget. For the lower earner, it’s a much bigger percentage of their income.

This is where income-based splitting comes in. It’s not about one person subsidizing the other—it’s about proportional fairness. Both partners contribute what they reasonably can without one person feeling financially squeezed.

Couple having a calm conversation about finances at home, warm lighting

The Percentage-of-Income Method

The most straightforward approach: each person pays a percentage of their income toward shared expenses. It’s simple to understand and automatically adjusts if someone’s salary changes.

1

Add up both incomes

If you earn HK$25,000 and your partner earns HK$45,000, your combined income is HK$70,000.

2

Calculate each person’s percentage

You’re 36% of the combined income (2570). Your partner is 64% (4570). These percentages determine how much each person contributes.

3

Apply to shared expenses

Rent is HK$12,000. You pay 36% (HK$4,320), your partner pays 64% (HK$7,680). Groceries are HK$2,000 monthly—you pay HK$720, they pay HK$1,280.

Person writing in budget notebook with calculator and financial documents spread on wooden desk

What This Guide Covers

This article provides educational information about expense-splitting approaches. The methods discussed are informational—they’re not financial advice tailored to your specific situation. Every couple’s circumstances are different. Consider consulting with a financial counselor if you need help adapting these frameworks to your household’s unique income levels, debts, or long-term goals.

Other Methods Worth Considering

Income-based splitting works for many couples, but it’s not the only option. Some people prefer fixed amounts, hybrid approaches, or pooling systems. The best method is the one you both feel is fair and can actually stick to.

Fixed Amount Method

You decide on a specific monthly amount—say HK$5,000—that each person contributes to shared expenses. Simpler than calculating percentages, but doesn’t adjust automatically if income changes significantly.

50/50 Simplified

You split everything down the middle. Works best when income is similar. If there’s a gap, this approach often leads to resentment from the lower earner.

Full Pooling

You merge all income into one household account and draw from it together. Requires high trust and transparent conversations about spending. Works well for couples planning long-term financial goals.

Two people smiling while looking at tablet with budgeting app, seated on couch together

Making It Work in Practice

Income-based splitting works because it’s proportional. You’re not asking the lower earner to stretch their budget. You’re not letting the higher earner off easy. Both people contribute meaningfully, and both have breathing room in their personal finances.

Start by having the conversation. Sit down with your partner and calculate your combined income. Work through the percentages together. Then decide which expenses you’ll split this way—often rent and utilities make sense, while groceries might be different. The exact system matters less than the fact that you’re talking about it and agreeing on something that feels fair to both of you.

Review the arrangement every six months. If someone’s income changes, you’ll want to adjust. If you’re feeling resentful or unheard, that’s a sign to revisit the conversation. Fair expense splitting isn’t a formula you set and forget—it’s something you check in on, just like the rest of your financial life together.