Free tools to split costs fairly, document expenses clearly, and keep the focus where it belongs — on your kid.
Travel sports are expensive enough without adding the complexity of shared custody logistics. These tools were designed to reduce friction — not create it. No judgment, no assumptions. Just clear numbers and fair frameworks that make the financial conversation easier for everyone.
Generate a clear, printable expense-sharing agreement. Customize split ratios, approval thresholds, and which costs are shared vs. individual.
Create Agreement →Log expenses throughout the season and automatically calculate each parent's share. Running totals, per-expense splits, and a season summary you can share.
Open Calculator →What to save, how to organize it, and why timestamps matter. A practical guide to expense documentation that protects both parents.
Read Guide →Right now, splitting travel sports expenses between co-parents means forwarding receipts, arguing over screenshots, and hoping your spreadsheet is up to date. Athleos automates this entirely — shared expense tracking, automatic split calculations, categorized records, and exportable summaries. Both parents see the same numbers, in real time.
Join the WaitlistCommon arrangements include 50/50, proportional to income, or category-based splits (e.g., one parent covers equipment, the other covers tournament fees). There's no single "right" way — what matters is that both parents agree and document it clearly.
Typically shared: club fees, tournament registration, equipment. Often individual: food during games, parent travel/lodging, spectator admission. Our expense agreement template helps you define this upfront.
Our template is an informal agreement designed for communication, not a legal contract. For binding agreements tied to custody orders, consult a family law attorney. That said, having any written agreement is better than relying on verbal promises.
Our expense agreement template includes an "approval threshold" — a dollar amount above which both parents must agree before committing. This prevents surprise $500 tournament fees and gives both parents a voice in financial decisions.