AthleosFinancial Intelligence → Co-Parenting
🤝 Co-Parenting Toolkit

Travel Sports Expenses
When You're Co-Parenting

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.

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Expense Agreement Template

Generate a clear, printable expense-sharing agreement. Customize split ratios, approval thresholds, and which costs are shared vs. individual.

Create Agreement →
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Expense Split Calculator

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 →
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Documentation Guide

What to save, how to organize it, and why timestamps matter. A practical guide to expense documentation that protects both parents.

Read Guide →

How Athleos Helps

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.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do co-parents typically split travel sports costs?

Common 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.

What expenses should be shared vs. individual?

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.

Do I need a lawyer for an expense agreement?

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.

What if we can't agree on which activities to fund?

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.