Group decision-making

When the group can't agree, spin instead.

Every option gets one equal slice of the wheel. No one person's preference wins by default — the spin decides.

Your entries

0 names

One entry per line. Duplicate an entry to give it better odds.

Remove winner after spin

Winner history

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Why randomness can be the fairest tiebreaker

Group decisions often stall not because the options are bad, but because everyone's trying to be polite and defer to someone else, or because a few people keep re-litigating the same two choices. Handing the actual decision to a random spin, after everyone's suggestion is already on the table, sidesteps both problems — no one has to 'give in,' because no one made the call.

This works best when every option genuinely is acceptable to the group; a decision wheel isn't a substitute for filtering out options nobody actually wants first. Once the shortlist is set, though, a spin is a fast, visibly neutral way to make the final call.

Common uses

Where this wheel fits

✈️

Trip destination decisions

Shortlist a few destinations everyone's genuinely open to, then spin.

🍽️

Restaurant or venue choices

Settle group dinner plans without one person's pick automatically winning.

💡

Project or idea selection

When a team likes multiple project ideas equally, spin to pick which to pursue first.

🎨

Creative direction ties

Break a tie between two or three equally strong creative options.

Why Spinzelvo

Built to just work

01

Loads in under a second

No trackers, no ad auctions slowing your first paint. The wheel is interactive the moment the page appears.

02

Unlimited, resizing entries

Add 5 entries or 500 — labels shrink and wrap automatically so the wheel stays readable at any size.

03

Elimination mode built in

Flip one switch and each winner drops off the wheel, so you can run a full bracket without retyping entries.

04

Real randomness, shown honestly

The wheel spin is driven by the Web Crypto random source, not a fixed animation — every spin is independently fair.

How it works

Three steps, no account

01

Type or paste your entries

One per line in the entries box, or quick-add them one at a time. Duplicate an entry to weight the odds in its favor.

02

Press spin

Click the wheel, tap the Spin button, or hit the spacebar. The wheel decelerates naturally and lands on one entry.

03

Get your result

The result appears on a card with confetti, gets logged to your history, and — if elimination mode is on — comes off the wheel.

FAQ

Good to know

Is a random spin actually a good way to make group decisions?

It works well specifically for decisions where every remaining option is genuinely acceptable to the group — it's a tiebreaker, not a replacement for filtering out bad options first.

What if only some options are actually fair to everyone?

Filter the list down to only options everyone's genuinely fine with before spinning, so the randomness is applied to a fair shortlist.

Can this be used over a video call with a remote group?

Yes — one person can screen-share the wheel while collecting everyone's shortlisted options in chat beforehand.

Is it manipulable by whoever controls the list?

The person managing the entries could bias the list itself (e.g., adding an option multiple times), so for higher-stakes decisions, have the group agree on the final entry list together before spinning.