Family estate items arranged on a table with a phone inventory interface

Fair division for family belongings

Easy to use,
mathematically fair.

Estate Divvy gives family members and estate heirs a private, step-by-step way to inventory belongings, score preferences, and receive one mathematically guided distribution.

Designed for family members who want clarity without confrontation.

Most estate tools track assets and records. Estate Divvy focuses on one thing: how do we divide physical items fairly?

1

Invite everyone first

Create the estate, invite family members, and make sure everyone understands the process.

2

Build the shared inventory

Anyone in the group can add items with a photo and a name. Estimated values stay optional.

3

Score privately

Each person allocates the same point budget across the items they care about without negotiating in public.

4

Release final results

When everyone has submitted, Estate Divvy calculates the final proposed distribution and makes it available to the group.

Built for difficult decisions

Less debating. More clarity.

Instead of negotiating item by item, Estate Divvy gives everyone the same process: add belongings, score privately, and let the fair-division calculation produce one proposed result.

See the full workflowRead the family guide
Grandma Jean's Estate
Items8 added
People4 joined
Scoring2 of 4
Results locked until everyone submits

Private scoring. Shared inventory. One clear result.

Each person scores privately with the same point budget. The group sees the final proposed distribution only after everyone has submitted.

A practical way to divide inherited belongings.

Estate Divvy is built for family members, estate heirs, siblings, and relatives who need to divide a loved one's household items, keepsakes, furniture, collections, and other personal property without turning every decision into a negotiation.

For physical items

Track the belongings people care about, including photos, rooms, names, and optional estimated values.

For private preferences

Let each person score independently so family pressure does not distort what people actually want.

For final clarity

Receive a proposed distribution and downloadable report once everyone has submitted scores.