New country, new friends, new currency, same old problem: who owes whom?
Blog Home
🎬 By Scene6 min read

New country, new friends, new currency, same old problem: who owes whom?

Study abroad means months of shared apartments, group dinners, and weekend trips with people you just met. Here's how to manage shared expenses across cultures and currencies without drama.

Table of Contents

  • The Apartment Baseline
  • Groceries: Shared vs. Personal
  • Weekend Trips With Random Groups
  • The Currency Confusion
  • The End-of-Semester Reckoning

(For every exchange student who's been asked to split a dinner bill in a currency they still can't mentally convert.)

Week two of your semester in Barcelona. You're sharing an apartment with three other exchange students  Eone from Germany, one from South Korea, one from Brazil. Nobody uses the same bank. Nobody has the same concept of "cheap dinner." And your mental math still breaks down when converting euros to dollars at the supermarket checkout.

The Apartment Baseline

Rent and utilities are your fixed shared costs. Split them equally (or proportionally if rooms differ). Set up a recurring transfer to whoever's name is on the lease  Eautomate this on day one so nobody forgets. Shared supplies (toilet paper, cleaning products, cooking oil) go into a communal pot that you top up monthly with equal contributions.

Groceries: Shared vs. Personal

Different cultures have wildly different grocery habits. Your German roommate might buy bread and cold cuts; your Brazilian roommate might cook elaborate meals with expensive ingredients. The cleanest approach: shared staples (oil, salt, coffee, rice) are split equally; personal groceries are personal. If someone cooks dinner for the whole apartment, the group chips in for ingredients  Ebut only if everyone agreed to eat beforehand.

Weekend Trips With Random Groups

Study abroad inevitably involves spontaneous weekend trips with people you've known for two weeks. These trips involve mixed currencies (you might visit three countries in one weekend), rapid-fire spending (hostels, trains, street food), and a high likelihood that someone "will pay you back later" and then flies home to another continent.

The rule: settle up before the trip ends. Not "when we get back." Not "next week." Before you get off the last train. Once people return to their apartments and routines, the urgency to settle evaporates.

The Currency Confusion

When your group includes people from four countries spending money in a fifth country's currency, conversion becomes the biggest source of arguments. The solution: agree on one tracking currency (usually the local currency or USD) and convert everything on entry. Don't try to settle in multiple currencies  Eit creates exponentially more complexity.

The End-of-Semester Reckoning

The last week of the semester is emotional enough without chasing debts. Set a deadline two weeks before departure to settle all outstanding balances. After that, everyone's packing, saying goodbye, and catching flights to different continents. A web-based expense tracker that generates a final settlement summary is invaluable  Esend the link, confirm the numbers, transfer the money, and spend your last week making memories instead of spreadsheets.

Free Bill Splitting App