Split 1,000 in Ratio 1:3
1,000 split in the ratio 1:3 gives $250 and $750. Each part is calculated by dividing 1,000 into 4 equal units, then assigning 1:3 units to each share.
1,000 split 2 ways
Ratio 1:3 = 4 total parts
When to Use a 1:3 Ratio
A 1:3 ratio gives one party three times the other's share. You see this in angel investing (founder keeps 75%, investor gets 25%), profit-sharing when one partner handles all the work, or splitting costs between a primary user and someone who barely uses the service.
Real-World Example
A freelancer and their silent partner split $1,000 in project revenue at 1:3. The freelancer gets $750 for doing all the work; the partner gets $250 for providing the initial client connection.
Our take: A 1:3 split should reflect a 3x difference in either contribution, risk, or benefit. If you're the "1" in a 1:3 business split, make sure you're getting something else — equity, learning, or a foot in the door — that compensates for the lopsided payout.
How We Calculated This
Total ratio: 1:3 = 4 parts
Value per unit: 1,000 / 4 = $250
Part 1: 1 x $250 = $250
Part 2: 3 x $250 = $750
Verification: $250 + $750 = $1,000
Percentage Breakdown
| Part | Ratio | Percentage | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | 1 | 25.0% | $250 |
| Part 2 | 3 | 75.0% | $750 |
| Total | 4 | 100% | $1,000 |