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Everyone Sees Money Differently—but it should be fair.

  • Writer: Jack Light
    Jack Light
  • Apr 21
  • 2 min read

If you live or have lived in a shared house or go out a lot and share costs among yourself and your friends, you already know this, everyone thinks about money a little differently.


Some people track every pound. Others are more relaxed and assume it all balances out. Some will send money instantly, others need a reminder (or three). No one’s necessarily wrong, it’s just different habits, different priorities, and different ways of managing money.


Take living together. Rent is usually straightforward, but everything else isn’t. Bills come out at different times, someone ends up paying upfront, and everyone else is expected to send their share. Some do it immediately, some forget, and suddenly you’ve got money owed in multiple directions.


Or take a night out. One person grabs the drinks, someone else pays for the Uber, another covers food. In the moment, it feels easy. No one wants to slow things down by splitting everything exactly.


But afterwards? It’s unclear who owes what. People guess, delay, or just leave it, because no one wants to be the one awkwardly chasing their friends for £12.50.

But here’s the thing, everyone can agree that it should be fair.


If everyone can clearly see how much they owe, what it’s for and who they owe, there’s no debate. No awkward conversations or reminders. No mental maths on the spot as the bill is coming round. Just clarity and transparency.


That’s exactly what Oosh is built for.


Instead of relying on group chats, notes apps, or memory, Oosh keeps everything in one place. Whether it’s bills, beers, taxis or takeaways, all your requests or expenses as a group are in one place and kept track of. See how much you owe someone or are owed and instantly settle up in just a few taps, you don’t even need each other's bank details. 


In a city where you’re already spending a lot just to live and enjoy your time, the last thing you want is to be quietly out of pocket because things weren’t tracked properly.


Everyone sees money differently. But when it’s tracked simply, broken down transparently and can be settled up instantly, everyone can make sure its fair. 



 
 
 

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