A top British finishing school has launched a course on split bill dining etiquette, a sign that the age-old tradition of one person picking up the tab is under threat from a generation raised on Venmo and Tesco Meal Deals. The Corbridge Academy in Northumberland will host its inaugural “Modern Dining: The Bill” workshop next month, charging £150 a head for a two-hour session covering how to navigate group payments without causing offence.
The news has sparked a debate about money, manners, and the cost of living crisis. For many families in the North, the issue is not whether to split the bill but whether they can afford to eat out at all. The average cost of a meal for two in a mid-range restaurant has risen 18 per cent in two years, to £72. Meanwhile, real wages are still below 2008 levels. No wonder the etiquette books are being rewritten.
“The traditional rule was always that the host invites and the host pays,” said Henrietta Bligh, principal of the Corbridge Academy. “But modern life is more complicated. Young people are far more likely to split the bill, but they often lack the social skills to do it gracefully. We teach them how to suggest splitting evenly, how to calculate individual shares, and how to deal with someone who orders the lobster when everyone else has the set menu."
The course includes role-play scenarios: the friend who wants to split equally but only had a starter, the colleague who boasts about their bonus and insists on paying, the couple who never carry cash. The academy has reported that demand is high, with 40 places filling within a week.
Critics argue that such a course is a luxury only the wealthy can afford. In regions like the North East, where median household income is £28,000 a year, spending £150 on learning how to share a restaurant bill is out of reach. “It’s a bit tone deaf,” said Laura Thompson, a teacher from Newcastle. “Most people I know just use a calculator app on their phone and split it to the penny. We don’t need etiquette. We need cheaper food.”
The etiquette crisis comes at a time when union leaders are calling for a return to the “all-in” approach to collective bargaining. “Splitting the bill is a metaphor for everything that is wrong with the economy,” said Paddy O’Hara, a regional secretary for Unite. “Workers are being asked to split the risk, split the pay, split the pension. The boss always get the biggest slice. Our grandparents understood solidarity. You paid for your mate’s round and they paid for yours. That’s how communities survived.”
Restaurants themselves are divided. Some have embraced the split bill culture, adding options to pay per person on their digital menus. Others complain that it eats into profits, with staff spending 15 minutes sorting out who owes what. A survey by the British Hospitality Association found that 1 in 3 eateries now impose a surcharge on tables that request separate bills.
For now, the Corbridge Academy is betting that there is money to be made from the nation’s confusion. But in the real economy, where a family of four can easily spend £60 on a pizza takeaway, the lesson is different: the cost of a night out has become a luxury good. The etiquette question that matters is not who picks up the bill, but how we ever got here.








