Keep losing track of personal loans to friends? Use a personal currency!

MyCurrency
3 min readApr 9, 2020
No more forgetting IOUs or debts with friends. You can track IOUs more easily now by issuing personal currencies.

Isn’t it annoying when you lose track of how much you lent your friend, or they lent you, and the two of you are put in the awkward situation of disagreeing on how much was owed?

This kind of casual lending is very common. Roommates usually split bills on repairs and utilities, and sometimes for take-out and groceries. Small-personal-loans/IOUs are often extended in these kinds of circumstances.

Or when someone needs to pay for something with cash, like a cash-on-delivery package delivery, and they don’t have cash on hand, a friend, roommate, partner, etc will often cover the payment until the individual can withdraw the cash and pay them back.

Another common source of IOUs between friends is nights out. A group of friends who go for a night out usually split bills for dinner or on drinks at bars and pubs. One individual within the group of friends will often pay the entire bill and everyone else will keep track of how much they owe the bill payer.

These IOUs can easily be forgotten and misremembered if not tracked. But is there a way to track IOUs that is both reliable, and quick and easy enough to not be too much of a hassle to use?

There is: a personal currency!

By issuing a personal currency that represents how much money you owe, and transferring units of it to your friend any time you borrow money, you can make tracking how much money you owe nearly effortless.

For the first time ever, the newly released MyCurrency app makes the creation of personal currencies fast, easy and 100% free. Once you and your friends have downloaded the app on your phones, all you need to do is each create a personal currency, and anytime one of you borrows money from within the group, you transfer units of your own currency to the person lending the money.

Even if someone deactivates their MyCurrency account, the IOUs they issued to their friend would still show in their list of currencies on their friend’s

MyCurrency app, so the record of the debt would still be there. The only way the IOUs would not appear on the friend’s list of currencies is if the friend transfers the IOUs back to the borrower, when the borrower pays their friend back and settles the debt.

Also, no need to worry about the 5 percent fee that MyCurrency charges (e.g. if you issue 100 Tom dollars, an additional 5 Tom dollars is automatically issued on top of the 100, to be paid as a fee). The first 1,000 units are issued without a fee, and you and your friends can simply transfer those units back and forth, for as long as you want, for free.

So to summarize: a personal currency is the perfect tool for friends to keep track of small-loans/IOUs. With the launch of the MyCurrency app, it is now, for the first time ever, incredibly easy and 100% free to create a currency, so you can begin experimenting with different uses for your own personal currency.

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