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Settlement guide

How do you politely ask a friend to pay you back?

The EvenRound team · EditorialPublished Updated 2 min read

Lend a friend £40 and you're suddenly the awkward one. Here's how to ask for it back without making it weird.

Asking a friend for money is one of the strangest little social problems. You both know they owe you. You're not their bank. Bringing it up shouldn't be a big deal — but you're worried about coming across as fussy. The trick is to make the ask feel routine, not pointed. Mention it in passing. Use a tool, not a confrontation. Keep the language casual. Don't quote pennies. Most importantly: ask once, soon, before it's been six weeks and the silence has done all the awkwardness for you.

Steps

  1. 01
    Ask within a week — sooner is calmer

    After a fortnight, the ask starts feeling like a chase. Within a week it's just a reminder. The longer you wait, the bigger the social cost of bringing it up.

  2. 02
    Use a tool, not a text

    Send them a settle-up link — a tiny URL with the amount pre-filled. It's not a finger-wagging text; it's a one-tap action. Most people find it easier to receive than 'hey can you transfer me £40?'

  3. 03
    Be casual about the amount

    'Stick £40 over when you get a sec' lands better than '£40.00 please by Friday.' Specific-but-relaxed signals 'I know exactly what's owed, but I'm not stressed about it.'

  4. 04
    Don't apologise for asking

    Resist the urge to soften with 'Sorry to ask but…'. You're not doing anything wrong. The apology implies you should be. Drop it.

  5. 05
    If they don't pay in a week, ask once more — then drop it

    One reminder is fine. Two is nagging. After two, accept that you might not see the money, decide whether it's worth the friendship, and move on. (For groups, EvenRound lets you remove the unpaying member from new expenses without deleting the history.)

Worked example

The four-message ask that works every time

Sam paid for Friday's pizza, £60, split four ways. The next Tuesday she opens EvenRound, taps 'Send settle-up link' next to Alex (£15) and Priya (£15). Both get a WhatsApp message: 'Sam Pizza Fri — £15. Tap to pay 👉 evenround.com/...' Alex pays in 30 seconds. Priya forgets, Sam taps Send again on Friday. Both done. No 'awkward money chats', no group-chat reminder, no 'hey can you Venmo me when you get a chance'.

The awkwardness lives in the gap between knowing and asking. Close that gap quickly and politely, with a tool that turns the request into a single tap.

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