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Split 400 in Ratio 2:3:5

400 split in the ratio 2:3:5 gives $80, $120 and $200. Each part is calculated by dividing 400 into 10 equal units, then assigning 2:3:5 units to each share.

400 split 3 ways

Ratio 2:3:5 = 10 total parts

Part 1
$80
20.0%
Part 2
$120
30.0%
Part 3
$200
50.0%

When to Use a 2:3:5 Ratio

A 2:3:5 ratio — 20/30/50 — is a natural fit for three-tier splits. The golden ratio of business partnerships: one person does the heavy lifting (50%), another handles a key function (30%), and the third provides support or capital (20%).

Real-World Example

Three co-founders split $400 in annual profit. The CEO (5 shares) gets $200, the CTO (3 shares) gets $120, and the advisor (2 shares) gets $80. Each share reflects sweat equity and time commitment.

Our take: The 2:3:5 maps cleanly to common business structures. If you're the "5" (50%), you're carrying the heaviest load — make sure your contract reflects that. If you're the "2" (20%), negotiate for upside that grows your share over time, like performance bonuses or vesting schedules.

How We Calculated This

Total ratio: 2:3:5 = 10 parts

Value per unit: 400 / 10 = $40

Part 1: 2 x $40 = $80

Part 2: 3 x $40 = $120

Part 3: 5 x $40 = $200

Verification: $80 + $120 + $200 = $400

Percentage Breakdown

PartRatioPercentageAmount
Part 1220.0%$80
Part 2330.0%$120
Part 3550.0%$200
Total10100%$400