About
One awkward moment, solved.
Lunch Party splits a restaurant check by what each person actually ordered. It doesn’t do anything else, on purpose.
Why
The check lands. One person fronts it. Then comes the part nobody enjoys: working out who had what, whether to bother with the tax, and how to handle the tip. Usually badly, on a napkin, while a server waits.
“Just split it evenly” is the easy answer and the wrong one. It quietly taxes whoever ordered least to cover whoever ordered most. Lunch Party does the version everyone means but nobody wants to do by hand: each person pays for their own items, and tax and tip are split in proportion to that.
You scan the receipt, the line items get pulled off it automatically, you tap items onto people, and everyone gets an itemized total plus a prefilled Venmo or Zelle link to pay it back. The whole thing is meant to be done at the table, on a phone, before anyone’s left.
What it is, and isn’t
Is
- A receipt splitter for group meals
- Item-level: you pay for what you ordered
- Fair on tax and tip (proportional, not flat)
- No accounts, nothing stored server-side
- Free, no ads
- A web app that works in a phone browser
Isn’t
- A payments app (it just links out to Venmo and Zelle)
- A budgeting or expense tracker
- A social network or a group-chat replacement
- Storing your receipts for history
- Ad-supported or selling your data
- Promising perfect OCR (it’s only as good as the receipt photo)
Who makes it
Lunch Party is built and operated by Spergs, LLC, a Florida software company. It’s one of a small line-up of focused tools we ship.
The app is live. Scan, assign, settle, end to end. The app lives at app.lunchparty.net; this site (lunchparty.net) is the front door and where the privacy policy and terms live.
Try it on your next group meal
Scan the check, assign the items, send everyone their share.