Split 5,000 in Ratio 2:3
5,000 split in the ratio 2:3 gives $2,000 and $3,000. Each part is calculated by dividing 5,000 into 5 equal units, then assigning 2:3 units to each share.
5,000 split 2 ways
Ratio 2:3 = 5 total parts
When to Use a 2:3 Ratio
A 2:3 ratio — the 40/60 split — is one of the most common uneven divisions. Roommates where one has a slightly bigger room, business partners with different roles, or couples with a 40/60 income gap all land here. It feels proportional without being extreme.
Real-World Example
Two roommates split $5,000/month. One has the master (en-suite bathroom, bigger closet), the other has the standard room. At 2:3, the smaller room pays $2,000 and the master pays $3,000. Fair, clear, and no hard feelings.
Our take: The 2:3 ratio is the sweet spot for "close but not equal." It acknowledges the difference without making either party feel like they're getting a raw deal. In rent splits, a 2:3 usually maps to a room-size difference of about 50% — check with a tape measure before assuming.
How We Calculated This
Total ratio: 2:3 = 5 parts
Value per unit: 5,000 / 5 = $1,000
Part 1: 2 x $1,000 = $2,000
Part 2: 3 x $1,000 = $3,000
Verification: $2,000 + $3,000 = $5,000
Percentage Breakdown
| Part | Ratio | Percentage | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | 2 | 40.0% | $2,000 |
| Part 2 | 3 | 60.0% | $3,000 |
| Total | 5 | 100% | $5,000 |