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Najam cimera Split Kalkulator

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We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the Roommate Rent Split in your language. The content below is shown in English.

What is Roommate Rent Split?

The Roommate Rent Split Calculator divides total rent among roommates proportional to room size in square feet — the simplest defensible 'fair share' approach. A 1,000 sqft 3-bedroom apartment with bedrooms of 150, 120, and 100 sqft (370 total bedroom sqft) means roommate A's share is 150/370 = 40.5% of rent, B = 32.4%, C = 27%. For $3,000 total rent: A pays $1,216, B pays $973, C pays $811. Calculator handles 3-bedroom setups; for 2 or 4+ bedrooms apply the same proportional logic. Common fairness factors beyond pure square footage: (1) En-suite bathroom premium — having private bathroom typically adds 10–20% to that room's share. (2) Walk-in closet vs reach-in — 5% adjustment. (3) View/window quality — 5–10% for premium views. (4) Parking spot ownership — usually allocated separately as add-on. (5) Utilities — split evenly or proportional to room share. (6) Common space access (does anyone get exclusive use of office or den?). Alternative splitting methods: (1) Pure equal split — simplest but unfair when room sizes differ significantly. Works for similar-sized bedrooms only. (2) Square footage proportional (this calculator's default) — defensible and easy to explain. (3) Custom weighted — apply weights to bathroom access, parking, closet, etc. for finest accuracy but harder to negotiate. (4) Bid-based (Spliddit.org method) — each roommate states what they'd pay for each room; algorithm assigns rooms and payments. Used by roommate-matching services to eliminate ambiguity. Distinct from rent splitting: utility and bill splitting. Most households split utilities (electric, gas, internet) evenly regardless of room size — usage tends to even out. Internet ($60–120) and streaming services ($20–50) typically split evenly. Groceries split based on actual usage (chore charts, shared shopping budgets, or just don't share groceries). Best practice: written roommate agreement covering rent split, utility split, chore allocation, guest policies, lease termination protocols. Splitwise app handles shared expense tracking; Rocket Lawyer has templates for formal roommate agreements.

Calkulon makes complex calculations simple — built for students and everyday problem-solvers.

Formula

f(x)Each Share = (Room Sqft / Total Bedroom Sqft) × Total Rent

Variable Legend

SymbolImeJedinicaOpis
TTotal Rent$Combined monthly rent for the unit
R1Room 1 SizesqftSquare footage of first bedroom
R2Room 2 SizesqftSquare footage of second bedroom
R3Room 3 SizesqftSquare footage of third bedroom (use 0 for 2-bedroom)

How to Roommate Rent Split

  1. 1Step 1 — Enter total monthly rent for the unit
  2. 2Step 2 — Measure each bedroom (length × width = square feet)
  3. 3Step 3 — Enter each room's square footage
  4. 4Step 4 — Calculator sums total bedroom square footage
  5. 5Step 5 — Each roommate's share = (Room Size / Total Bedroom Sqft) × Total Rent
  6. 6Step 6 — Outputs proportional split plus equal-split comparison
  7. 7Step 7 — Adjust for premiums if applicable (en-suite bath, closet, view)

Worked Examples

Example 1Standard 3-bedroom
Given:$3,000 rent, 150/120/100 sqft rooms
Rezultat:$1,216 / $973 / $811 — proportional

Total bedroom sqft 370. Largest room (150/370 = 40.5%) pays $1,216. Equal split would be $1,000 each — largest room saves $216 with equal, pays $216 more with proportional.

Example 2Master suite premium
Given:$3,500 rent, 200/150/100 sqft + master has en-suite bath
Rezultat:Pure sqft: $1,556/$1,167/$778. With 15% en-suite premium: $1,789/$1,000/$711

Premium for private bathroom shifts cost meaningfully

Example 32-bedroom apartment
Given:$2,200 rent, 180/140 sqft (no Room 3)
Rezultat:$1,237 / $963

Total 320 sqft. Larger room (56%) pays $1,237; smaller (44%) pays $963.

Example 4Similar-sized rooms
Given:$2,400 rent, 130/120/110 sqft
Rezultat:$867/$800/$733

Small differences in size lead to modest payment differences. Some households just split evenly when rooms are within 10% of each other.

Real-World Applications

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New roommate move-in negotiations

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Lease renewal conversation

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Couple-with-roommates situations

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Multi-generational households (adult children with parents)

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Co-living shared spaces with rotating roommates

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Family disputes over shared housing

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

What about en-suite bathroom premium?

A

Most fair-split practitioners add 10–20% to the room share for en-suite bathroom access. Calculate as: (Base sqft share + 15% premium of total rent ÷ number of en-suite rooms). Worked example: $3,000 rent, 3 rooms, one with en-suite. Premium = $3,000 × 15% = $450; that roommate pays sqft share + $450 / 1 = +$450. Other roommates' shares reduce proportionally.

Q

How should we split utilities?

A

Most households split utilities evenly regardless of room size — bills tend to even out monthly. Exceptions: high-usage roommates (gamer with 3 monitors, frequent baking) can volunteer to pay more. Internet/streaming services split evenly. Use Splitwise app or shared Google Sheet to track ongoing bills.

Q

What if rooms are equal size but one is louder/quieter?

A

Subjective preferences (quiet vs near-living-room, ground floor vs upstairs, view vs no view) can be addressed via the bid-based method: each roommate states what they'd pay for each room privately; algorithm assigns rooms to people who valued them most and computes payments minimizing envy. Spliddit.org provides the algorithm free; useful for newer roommate groups.

Q

Should the lead lease holder pay less?

A

Generally no — administrative work doesn't justify rent discount in most arrangements. Lead lease holder takes legal risk (responsible for full rent if roommates default) which can justify a small discount or final approval on new roommates. Frame any compensation as 'risk premium' rather than 'admin discount.'

Q

How do we handle a move-out mid-lease?

A

Pre-negotiate in written agreement: typically the departing roommate is responsible for finding a replacement subject to remaining roommates' approval (right to refuse for legitimate reasons — bad credit, lifestyle mismatch). If no replacement found by move-out date, departing roommate continues paying their share until lease ends or new tenant secured. Many leases require landlord approval for roommate changes — coordinate accordingly.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • !Splitting equally when rooms differ significantly (causes resentment over time)
  • !Forgetting closet, bathroom, parking premiums in the calculation
  • !Not documenting the agreement in writing (memories fade, disputes arise)
  • !Splitting groceries evenly when usage is wildly different (one cooks, others don't)
  • !Not addressing utility allocation in advance — bills arrive monthly with surprise variance
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Pro Tip

Always document the rent split in a written roommate agreement (not just text messages). Include: rent split formula and amounts, utility split, chore allocation, guest policy, move-out protocol, lease termination handling. Rocket Lawyer and EZLandlordForms have free templates. Written agreements prevent 80% of roommate conflicts.

Regional Guides

High-cost cities
College/young professional markets
Co-living developments (WeLive, Common, Quarters)
📖Difficulty:Beginner
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Reviewed June 2026
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