Enter the Robux pool you want to distribute.
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Roblox Group Revenue Split Calculator
Compare equal, percentage, or weighted Roblox revenue splits and see a clean payout result for every teammate.
Split settings
Payout plan
The result shows the rounded payout each member would receive and the exact unrounded share used to create that allocation.
What this page is best for
A good fit when several people need a clean payout plan and you want the split math settled before you touch the live group payout flow.
- Split a Robux pool equally across all members.
- Use percentages when payout shares are fixed by agreement.
- Use weights when the proportions matter more than exact percentages.
How the split stays fair
The tool normalizes the chosen shares, calculates the exact result, then rounds to whole Robux for a practical payout plan.
- Exact payout values are shown so you can see the math before whole-number rounding.
- Rounded payouts are the practical values you would use when planning a real payout.
- If there is a remainder after rounding, the calculator distributes it to the highest remainder shares first.
Start with the pool size and split mode, then list every participant you want included.
Leave the deduction at 0% for treasury-style splitting, or set a planning deduction if needed.
Choose equal, percentage, or weighted split mode.
Add participants and review each rounded payout before you copy the result.
Common payout scenarios
Each example loads into the tool and runs, so the stated result is exactly what you will see.
Equal split for a small team
Divide 2,400 Robux equally between three contributors.
Sample inputs
- Pool
- 2,400 Robux
- Mode
- Equal
- Participants
- 3
Result: 2,400 Robux at 0% deduction splits equally to 800 Robux each across the three contributors.
Weighted split for unequal contribution
Use weights when one contributor owns a larger share than the others.
Sample inputs
- Pool
- 5,000 Robux
- Mode
- Weighted
- Weights
- 5, 3, 2
Result: Weights 5, 3, 2 normalize to 50/30/20, so a 5,000 Robux pool pays 2,500, 1,500, and 1,000 Robux.
See the leftover-Robux rounding
A pool that does not divide evenly shows how the remainder is distributed.
Sample inputs
- Pool
- 1,000 Robux
- Mode
- Equal
- Participants
- 3
Result: 1,000 Robux split equally across 3 is 333.33 each, floored to 333; the one leftover Robux goes to the largest remainder, giving 334, 333, 333.
Leftover Robux are distributed by largest fractional remainder, with ties broken alphabetically.