Terms of Service
Last updated: 2025-08-25
Use at your own risk
SplitPro provides calculations “as is” with no warranties. Always verify results before settling payments.
Acceptable use
Do not misuse the site or attempt to harm its operation. We may modify or discontinue features at any time.
Liability
We are not liable for any losses arising from use of this site.
Contact
Questions about these terms? Email everydayroyalties@gmail.com.
Simple terms
Terms of use
By using this site, you agree to these Terms and our Privacy Policy. The calculator provides an educational estimate for splitting costs; it is not a financial service or legal advice.
Allowed use
- Personal, non‑commercial use of the site and calculator.
- No scraping, automated abuse, or reverse engineering of the code.
Limitations
The site is provided “as‑is” without warranties. We’re not liable for losses from use or reliance on results.
Changes
We may update these Terms by posting a new version on this page.
Putting the terms into practice
Examples of acceptable and unacceptable use
Most people use SplitPro in simple, everyday ways. These examples show how the terms of service apply when you're sharing results with others.
Examples of acceptable use
- Group dinners. You run the numbers and share a screenshot so everyone can pay their portion.
- Trip recaps. After a weekend away, you send per‑person totals along with your notes on who covered which shared costs.
- Teaching scenarios. Instructors or bloggers use small, anonymized examples to explain how fair splitting works.
Examples of use we don't support
- Harassment or pressure. Using the tool's results to shame or harass someone about how much they did or didn't spend.
- Misrepresentation. Editing the numbers before sharing in order to charge someone more than their fair share.
- Commercial resale. Packaging the core tool as your own paid service without clear added value or permission.
Our terms are meant to protect both everyday users and the integrity of the tool, so fair, transparent use remains the norm.
Shared responsibility
What you're responsible for when you use SplitPro
Even with a clear tool, groups still make decisions about how they want to treat gray areas. The calculator supports those decisions but doesn't replace them.
- Choosing the rule. You and your group decide whether to split equally, proportionally, or by item—SplitPro just applies the rule.
- Checking for mistakes. It's always worth scanning the receipt and results before people send final payments.
- Explaining the outcome. When you share results, be ready to walk through how the totals were created if someone has a question.
- Using the tool respectfully. The math can be exact, but it should always be used in a way that respects the people behind the numbers.
In short, SplitPro provides structure and transparency; you and your group bring fairness, empathy, and shared agreements.
Connections and limits
Using SplitPro together with banks and payment platforms
SplitPro focuses on calculations; banks and payment apps handle the actual transfers. It's important to understand the difference.
- No direct control over payments. SplitPro doesn't move money or reverse charges—it only helps you figure out who owes what.
- Independent policies. Each payment service has its own fees, dispute processes, and terms you agree to separately.
- Your responsibility to verify. Before sending large amounts, double-check account details and totals with your group.
Think of SplitPro as a neutral calculator that sits beside whatever payment tools you and your friends prefer to use.
Learning and teaching
Using SplitPro in educational content and demonstrations
Instructors, bloggers, and creators sometimes feature SplitPro when teaching about budgeting, travel planning, or everyday money skills.
- Use fictional or anonymized examples. When teaching, build sample bills instead of exposing real people's spending.
- Link to the official site. Point learners back to the original tool so they're always using the latest version.
- Don't imply official partnership. Unless you've arranged it, avoid stating or suggesting a formal endorsement.
Clear attribution keeps things honest while still letting more people discover tools that can help them practice real-world math.