Even splits
The house rental, the group taxi and the shared groceries all split equally across everyone with a single tap.
iPhone & iPad · Group trips
Shared trips are the best kind, right up until someone has to work out who owes what. PocketTrip tracks every shared cost as it happens, handles the uneven splits, and shows a clean who-owes-whom overview. Your group settles up in a few minutes instead of arguing over a spreadsheet.

Why it gets messy
One person books the villa. Someone else covers dinner three nights running. A third puts the rental car on their card and forgets to mention it. By the time you're home, nobody can remember who paid for what, everyone's rounding in their own favour, and the friend who fronted the most is quietly annoyed. A split expenses app sorts this the moment the money leaves someone's hand, not weeks later from memory.
Every time someone in the group covers a cost, add it in a few seconds: the amount, who paid, and who it was for. PocketTrip keeps a running balance for each person, so you never have to reconstruct a week of spending from a pile of receipts and half-remembered rounds. The awkward "so… who owes who?" conversation is already answered before you ask it.
How it works
Set up the trip and add everyone travelling with you. It all lives on your phone, so your friends don't need to download anything or make an account.
Each time someone pays, add the expense and pick who it covered. Split it evenly, or set an uneven split when only some of the group shared it.
Open the overview to see exactly who owes whom, simplified down to the fewest payments. Square up in a couple of transfers and fly home even.
Real trips, real splits
Real groups are messy. People arrive on different days, skip the pricey dinner, or share a room while someone else pays for a single. PocketTrip handles all of it instead of forcing everyone into an even split that quietly cheats somebody.
The house rental, the group taxi and the shared groceries all split equally across everyone with a single tap.
When only some people shared it, split by exact amounts or leave people out entirely, so each person carries only their share.
Every expense records who fronted the money, so the person who covered the villa deposit actually gets it back.
Instead of everyone paying everyone, PocketTrip nets it down to the fewest transfers to close the group out.
Split a cost in the currency you paid it in; totals convert back to your home currency automatically.
Do it as you go, offline if you have to, so the balance is always current. No reconstructing the trip afterward.
Live vs. the spreadsheet
Somebody makes a beautiful spreadsheet on day one. By day three it has three rows in it. Nobody wants to open a browser and type formulas while everyone else is heading to the beach, so the whole thing gets left until the flight home, where it turns into an hour of "wait, what was that one for?" that nobody enjoys.
Logging a split in PocketTrip takes about as long as splitting the bill in your head, except it actually gets saved. Do it at the table, hand your phone back, and the group balance updates for everyone at once. When the trip ends there's nothing to reconcile, because it's been reconciling itself the whole time.
FAQ
When you add a shared expense, you mark who paid and who it was for. PocketTrip keeps a running tally for everyone in the group and turns it into a simple settle-up overview that shows exactly who owes whom, so nobody has to add anything up by hand.
Yes. Split a cost equally with one tap, or set it uneven when only some people shared it: a taxi three of you took, a bottle of wine two of you drank, a room one person had to themselves. You can split by exact amounts or leave people out entirely.
No. You track the whole group from your own phone, so friends don't need to download anything or create an account. When it's time to settle up you can show or share the who-owes-whom summary with everyone.
Yes. Log a shared cost in whatever currency you paid it in and PocketTrip converts it back to your home currency with live rates, so the settle-up totals stay accurate even when the group is spending across borders.