Split 10,000 in Ratio 1:2:3
10,000 split in the ratio 1:2:3 gives $1,666.67, $3,333.33 and $5,000. Each part is calculated by dividing 10,000 into 6 equal units, then assigning 1:2:3 units to each share.
10,000 split 3 ways
Ratio 1:2:3 = 6 total parts
When to Use a 1:2:3 Ratio
A 1:2:3 ratio divides something into 6 parts — one person gets 1/6, another gets 2/6, and a third gets 3/6 (half). Common in tiered partnerships, inheritance splits between children of different ages, or project budgets allocated across departments by headcount.
Real-World Example
Three siblings inherit $10,000. The eldest (who managed the estate for years) gets 3 shares ($5,000), the middle child gets 2 shares ($3,333.33), and the youngest gets 1 share ($1,666.67). The split reflects effort, not favoritism.
Our take: In a 1:2:3 split, the largest share is 3x the smallest. Before committing, ask: does a 3x difference actually reflect reality? In a three-person startup, it might make sense if the founder (3 shares) built the product, the marketer (2 shares) grew the audience, and the advisor (1 share) contributed occasional guidance.
How We Calculated This
Total ratio: 1:2:3 = 6 parts
Value per unit: 10,000 / 6 = $1,666.67
Part 1: 1 x $1,666.67 = $1,666.67
Part 2: 2 x $1,666.67 = $3,333.33
Part 3: 3 x $1,666.67 = $5,000
Verification: $1,666.67 + $3,333.33 + $5,000 = $10,000
Percentage Breakdown
| Part | Ratio | Percentage | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | 1 | 16.7% | $1,666.67 |
| Part 2 | 2 | 33.3% | $3,333.33 |
| Part 3 | 3 | 50.0% | $5,000 |
| Total | 6 | 100% | $10,000 |