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The Missing Dollar Riddle

The well-known “Missing Dollar” puzzle! It’s fun because it smartly tricks our minds. Let us take it one step at a time:

The Riddle:

Three friends go out for lunch and spend $30. Each person contributes $10, so they pay $30 in total. The waiter realizes that the bill was only $25, so he gives back $5 to the friends.

Since $5 is hard to split evenly among three people, the friends decide to tip the waiter $2 and split the remaining $3, taking $1 each. Now, each friend has effectively paid $9 ($10 initially paid minus $1 returned).

Here comes the mystery:

But the friends started with $30. Where did the missing dollar go?


Breaking it down:

The riddle plays a clever trick on our logic by misdirecting the calculation. Let’s analyze the scenario step by step.

Step 1: The total money paid

The friends originally paid $30. Out of this:

This accounts for the entire $30:

Step 2: Where the $27 comes from?

When we say that each friend paid $9, we’re effectively combining:

So, the $27 already includes the tip:

Step 3: The trick

The riddle’s trick lies in the misdirection. It incorrectly adds the $2 tip to the $27 (the total paid) instead of properly accounting for where the money went. The tip is already part of the $27! There’s no missing dollar — it’s all accounted for.

The Conclusion:

The “missing dollar” doesn’t exist. The confusion arises because the riddle mixes two separate concepts: the total amount spent ($27, including the tip) and the original $30 contributed. By carefully tracing where each dollar goes, we see that the money is accounted for perfectly.

Why this riddle is so fun?

The Missing Dollar Riddle is a great example of how math can trick us when we’re not careful. It reminds us to always pay attention to what is being added or subtracted and why. It’s not just about numbers—it’s about logic and clarity.

Do you know someone who’d enjoy solving this riddle? Share it with them and see if they can figure it out before reading the explanation!

Happy riddling!

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