The wine bar math problem
Wine bars aren’t restaurants with wine lists. They’re venues where wine is the event. And that creates a splitting problem unlike any other: when there’s no shared entree to anchor the bill, price variance between individuals can explode.
Consider a typical wine bar evening. Four friends, two hours, no food beyond a cheese board. The tab arrives at $187. Someone reaches for the calculator app. “So that’s about $47 each?”
But here’s what actually happened:
Person A ordered $24 worth of wine. With an even split, they’d pay $46.75. That’s a 95% markup on their actual consumption. Meanwhile, Person B ordered $62 worth and would pay $46.75—a 25% discount subsidized by their friends.
This isn’t a rounding error. This is the core problem with wine bar splitting: price variance is the product, not a side effect.