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Split 2,000 in Ratio 3:7

2,000 split in the ratio 3:7 gives $600 and $1,400. Each part is calculated by dividing 2,000 into 10 equal units, then assigning 3:7 units to each share.

2,000 split 2 ways

Ratio 3:7 = 10 total parts

Part 1
$600
30.0%
Part 2
$1,400
70.0%

When to Use a 3:7 Ratio

A 3:7 ratio — 30/70 — is common in investor-operator splits. An investor puts up 70% of the capital and takes 70% of returns, while the operator runs the day-to-day for 30%. Also used in revenue sharing between platforms and creators.

Real-World Example

An investor and operator split $2,000 in real estate rental income. The investor (7 shares) gets $1,400 for putting up the capital. The operator (3 shares) gets $600 for managing tenants, repairs, and bookkeeping.

Our take: The 30/70 split is the standard for passive vs. active partnerships. If you're the operator taking the smaller share, make sure you're building equity or reputation that pays off beyond this one deal. If you're the investor, remember that 70% of nothing is still nothing — the operator's execution matters more than your capital.

How We Calculated This

Total ratio: 3:7 = 10 parts

Value per unit: 2,000 / 10 = $200

Part 1: 3 x $200 = $600

Part 2: 7 x $200 = $1,400

Verification: $600 + $1,400 = $2,000

Percentage Breakdown

PartRatioPercentageAmount
Part 1330.0%$600
Part 2770.0%$1,400
Total10100%$2,000