Hi, Gnucash is certainly capable of doing what you require. I use it to manage separate accounts for my wife and myself and a joint accounst and separate debit and credit cards. The first thing is to have you asset and liability accounts match your actual bank accounts and ownership of them. You can use placeholder subaccounts to separate the individual ownership E.g.
Assets:Current Assets:Person A:Savings account Assets:Current Assets:PersonB:Savings account Assets:Current Assets:Joint:Cheque account Liabilities:Person A:Creditcard Liabilities:Person B:Credit card with a similar structure for Expenses to manage how you split the expenses Expenses:Rent:Person A Expenses:Rent:Person B Gnucash supports transactions with what are known as two or more splits. An example transaction for an equal sharing of the rent of $300 could look something like: Debit | Credit Expenses:Rent:Person A 150 | Expenses:Rent:Person B 150 | Assets:Current Assets:Person A:Savings account | 150 Assets:Current Assets:PersonB:Savings account | 150 or even a combination of two transactions Debit | Credit Assets:Current Assets:Person A:Savings account | 150 Assets:Current Assets:PersonB:Savings account | 150 Assets:Current Assets:Joint:Cheque account 300 Debit | Credit Assets:Current Assets:Joint:Cheque account | 300 Expenses:Rent: 300 | The structure of the accounts and the transactions is dictated by the detail you wish to preserve and how you actually manage the sharing process. Gnucash is a double entry accounting system so if the above transactions do not make sense, you may need to become familiar with the concepts of double entry accounting first. In the first transaction set Expenses:Rent is a placeholder account while the personA and PersonB sub-accounts record the individuals contributions to the rent. Here the sharing is recorded in the Expenses sub account structure In the second set the sharing is managed by the transfers into a joint account before payment not at the Expenses end. It is perfectly possible to replace the last line of the second transaction with the first two lines of the first transaction. You will need to structure the accounts and transactions to reflect how you share the expenses and when and from what accounts you pay them. David Cousens ----- David Cousens -- View this message in context: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/shared-expenses-IOU-accounting-tp4692799p4692812.html Sent from the GnuCash - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.