Splitting expenses on a Rome trip - what to budget, how to settle up
Last updated by The EvenRound team.
Carbonara, Vatican tickets, and one trattoria that doesn't split bills.
Rome is the European capital where 'split the bill' is most likely to get a hard 'no' from the waiter. Many trattorias still issue one bill to the table, and you're expected to settle internally. That's where EvenRound (or any group app) earns its keep: receipt-line splitting at the table, then settle on the way to the next gelateria.
Realistic per-person daily budget
Local currency: Euro (EUR)
| Category | Per person, per day | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | €70–€120 | Trastevere or Monti apartment for 4; centro hotels run €170–€260/night for a double. |
| Food and drinks | €45–€70 | Pizza al taglio (€4–€8 a slice), carbonara dinner (€14–€20 mains plus coperto €2–€4), gelato (€3–€5), espresso al banco (€1.20). |
| Transport | €6–€10 | Roma Pass 48-hour (€32) or single tickets €1.50. Leonardo Express airport €14 each way. |
| Activities and entrances | €25–€50 | Vatican Museums (€20 advance), Colosseum + Forum (€18), Borghese (€19, advance), Pantheon (€5). |
Common shared-expense scenarios in Rome
Recommended split mode for Rome
Sample 3-day itinerary with expense touchpoints
Best for groups of …
Best for groups of 4–8. Trattorias handle 6–8 with reservation; Vatican tours cap at 10–12 per group.
Currency notes
Eurozone. Coperto (cover charge) is €2–€4 per person at most sit-down places - that's the bread/water charge, not a tip. Tipping is round up or 5–10%. Espresso al banco (standing at the bar) is €1–€1.50; the same espresso seated at a table can be €4. Most places take contactless; small trattorias still cash-only.
Rome rewards groups who ask for la lista before the bill comes - let the waiter itemise on paper, then split exactly. The carbonara is too good to argue over after.
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