The average British worker has enough on their plate without the mental arithmetic of dividing a restaurant bill between a table of friends who ordered a starter, a main, two sides, and three glasses of wine while you stuck to tap water. Yet this is the daily reality for millions navigating the social minefield of “who ordered what” – a task made more fraught by the cost of living crisis, which has driven up resentment over perceived unfairness.
Today, leading etiquette consultant Emily Post-Anderson – great-granddaughter of the legendary Emily Post – issued a public plea for a standardised system of bill splitting. “We are seeing a breakdown of basic trust at the dinner table,” she said. “Friendships are fraying. People are walking away from meals feeling cheated or guilty, and it is entirely avoidable with clear protocols.”
Post-Anderson’s proposed protocol includes three simple rules. Rule one: the host always announces the method before anyone orders. Rule two: the default is individual bills unless someone explicitly volunteers to cover the whole table. Rule three: if using a common pot, an app like Splitwise is mandatory, and everyone must log their items in real time.
The call comes after a survey by the consumer group FairPay found that 68 per cent of Britons have experienced awkwardness or conflict over a restaurant bill in the past year. Among 18-to-34-year-olds – already squeezed by stagnant wages and high rents – the figure rose to 81 per cent. “It’s the small things that break the bond,” said FairPay director Laura Henshaw. “When you’re counting every penny, watching someone order a £50 steak while you eat a side salad and then being asked to split equally feels like a betrayal.”
Rebecca Llewellyn, a 29-year-old teacher from Manchester, described a recent dinner with friends that ended with a three-hour WhatsApp chain. “One person ordered a bottle of wine just for herself, then insisted on equal split. I spent the rest of the month eating beans on toast to make up for it.” Her story echoes the experience of many young workers who trade socialising as a rare luxury care for the mental arithmetic that follows.
But the etiquette plea is not just about money. It is about the politics of the table. “Who pays for the birthday person? What about the guest who picks the expensive restaurant?” asked Post-Anderson. “We need a national conversation. Perhaps even legislation for restaurants to publish clear guidelines on their menu or website.”
Restaurants, however, are split. The Fine Dining Association warned that too much rigidity might ruin the spontaneity of shared meals. “A crisp, fair conversation is better than a clipboard,” said chair James Mortimer. “But we do see the pressure. Our staff are trained to ask about separate bills upfront.”
Meanwhile, the Unite the Unions – long advocates for transparency in pricing – saw a wider issue. “This is about power and fairness,” said general secretary Sharon Graham. “The same forces that drive down wages and raise prices create tensions in our personal lives. A split bill is a microcosm of the larger inequality in the economy.”
For now, Post-Anderson is making her findings available free online. “In a time of high living costs and fractured communities, something as simple as knowing how to split a bill can rebuild trust. It brings dignity back to the table.” But whether the nation will embrace protocol over tradition remains to be seen. One thing is certain: the next time you reach for the dessert menu, you will likely be asked to log it on an app first.








