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Personal Finance & Budgeting Apps 2026 Deep Dive - YNAB, Monarch, Copilot Money, Actual Budget, Lunch Money, Firefly III, Toss, Zaim

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Prologue — The Day Mint Died, What Began

On March 23, 2024, Intuit shut down Mint. Twenty-four years of history, roughly 3.5 million final users, orphaned overnight. Intuit tried to migrate them to Credit Karma, but the core of a budgeting tool — categories, budgets, trends — was not there. A migration wave began.

Heirs rushed for the empty throne. Monarch Money branded itself "the Mint successor" and saw its signup graph go vertical within a week. Copilot Money had been carving its niche inside the Apple ecosystem. YNAB stood firm with its cult. Lunch Money pulled minimalists with its (then) lifetime payment option. And Actual Budget, Firefly III, Maybe Finance opened new doors for self-hosting users.

By 2026, the personal-finance landscape is more diverse than at any time before Mint. This piece maps that terrain in one volume.

"Mint invented 'free + ads + lead-gen' in 2007. What died in 2024 was that model — not the budget book."


Chapter 1 · The End of Mint — What Went Wrong

Mint launched in 2007 and was acquired by Intuit in 2009 for 170 million USD. At its peak it claimed 25 million users. So why did it die?

A business-model contradiction. Mint was free. Revenue came from credit-card, loan, and insurance affiliate fees. Users saw ads against their own data. As users grew, Mint's value rose — but from Intuit's perspective, that value did not flow into their other products (TurboTax, QuickBooks, Credit Karma).

The Credit Karma acquisition. In 2020, Intuit acquired Credit Karma for 7.1 billion USD. Credit Karma also ran on an affiliate model; credit scores were its core. The two products overlapped. It was obvious that one had to go.

Feature stagnation. Mint barely evolved after 2015. Its UI aged, it relied heavily on Yodlee, connection breakages were frequent. Meanwhile YNAB and Monarch charged money and iterated fast.

October 2023 announcement. Intuit officially said Mint would be folded into Credit Karma. On March 23, 2024 it shut down. Users had a 7-day CSV download window, and that was it.

The episode exposed the limits of the free-budget model. Free is expensive — your data becomes ad inventory, you become an affiliate lead. The new generation of 2026 is overwhelmingly paid-subscription.


Chapter 2 · Post-Mint Landscape — The US Top Five

The American personal-finance app market after Mint condenses into five names.

Monarch Money — Claiming Mint Successor

  • Pricing: 99.99 USD per year (14.99 USD per month)
  • Founder: Val Agostino (ex-Mint PM) — founded in 2018 "to reinvent Mint"
  • Backend: Yodlee + MX, 11,000+ institutions
  • Shared accounts by default (couples, families)
  • Polished design, dark mode
  • Tripled users in 2024 (post-Mint migration windfall)

Copilot Money — Apple-Native

  • Pricing: 12.99 USD per month / 95 USD per year / 199 USD lifetime (Premium)
  • iOS / macOS only (Android beta in 2024)
  • Plaid backend
  • AI category automation (your "My Pizza Place" gets bucketed into Dining automatically)
  • Deep Apple Card and Apple Cash integration
  • Multiple design awards

Quicken Simplifi — Quicken's Mobile-First Attempt

  • Pricing: 35.88 USD per year (2.99 USD per month)
  • New product from Quicken Inc. (born inside Intuit in 1983, spun out in 2016)
  • Spending Plan — real-time computation of remaining budget
  • Plaid backend

Rocket Money (formerly Truebill)

  • Pricing: Free + Premium (user-chosen, recommended 4 to 12 USD per month)
  • Core value: automated subscription cancellation
  • Acquired by Rocket Companies (Quicken Loans parent) in 2021
  • Focuses on plugging leaks rather than full budgeting

PocketGuard — "What You Can Safely Spend"

  • Pricing: Free + Plus (4.99 USD per month)
  • "In My Pocket" algorithm — after bills, savings, and essentials
  • Specialized in overspend prevention

Tiller — Spreadsheet-Based

  • Pricing: 79 USD per year (30-day trial)
  • Pushes data directly into Google Sheets / Excel
  • Plaid + Yodlee + MX backends
  • Beloved by spreadsheet enthusiasts

Chapter 3 · Method-Driven Apps — YNAB, EveryDollar, Goodbudget, Empower

Apps with a defined methodology target behavioral change, not mere tracking.

YNAB — Champion of Zero-Based Budgeting

  • Pricing: 109 USD per year (14.99 USD per month, 1 year free for students)
  • Founded in 2004 by Jesse Mecham
  • Four rules:
    1. Give Every Dollar a Job
    2. Embrace Your True Expenses
    3. Roll With the Punches
    4. Age Your Money
  • A cult following — Reddit r/ynab has over 250k members
  • Self-reports an average of 6,000 USD in debt cleared within a year
  • Backend: Plaid (added in 2020 after years of user pressure, not as a flex)

EveryDollar — The Dave Ramsey Method

  • Pricing: Free (basic) / Premium 17.99 USD per month / 79.99 USD per year
  • Operated by Ramsey Solutions
  • "Baby Steps 1 to 7" debt-payoff ladder
  • Envelope budgeting + zero-based
  • Strong with talk-radio listeners and church communities

Goodbudget — Digital Envelopes

  • Pricing: Free (10 envelopes) / Plus 10 USD per month or 80 USD per year
  • A faithful digital port of the paper-envelope metaphor
  • Strong family-sharing model
  • No bank connections — manual entry only (intentional friction)

Empower (formerly Personal Capital)

  • Pricing: Free for tracking; paid for advisory services
  • Strengths: net worth and investment-portfolio analysis
  • Famous for its 401(k) fee analyzer
  • Empower Retirement (the asset manager) acquired Personal Capital in 2020

Chapter 4 · Open Source / Self-Hosted — Actual, Firefly III, Maybe, GnuCash

For users who prize privacy, want to own their data, or refuse to pay forever, self-hosting is the answer.

Actual Budget — The Rising Open-Source Envelope Star

  • License: MIT
  • Pricing: 0 (self-hosted) / Actual cloud 4 USD per month
  • Founder James Long open-sourced it in 2022
  • React + Electron desktop, iOS and Android apps
  • Envelope + zero-based budgeting
  • 30-second Docker deploy — the friendliest self-hosted ledger

Firefly III — The PHP Self-Hosting Veteran

  • License: AGPL-3.0
  • Pricing: 0
  • PHP / Laravel backend, Vue frontend
  • Accounts, budgets, bills, rule engine, reports — full-spectrum ledger
  • Runs on Docker, Snap, or a direct install
  • Ecosystem of importer plugins (nordigen, Plaid, Spectre)

Maybe Finance — YC-Born Open-Source Newcomer

  • License: AGPL-3.0
  • Pricing: 0 (self-hosted) / Maybe cloud (beta in 2025)
  • Y Combinator W22, open-sourced in 2024
  • Strong design, proper mobile UI
  • Rails + Hotwire

GnuCash — The Desktop Classic Since 1998

  • License: GPL-2.0
  • Pricing: 0
  • Double-entry bookkeeping — the choice of serious bookkeepers
  • Linux / macOS / Windows desktop
  • 24 years of heritage and a steep learning curve

Other Desktop Ledgers

AppPlatformLicenseNote
HomeBankLinux / macOS / WinGPLLight, fast, free
KMyMoneyKDEGPLKDE-integrated, double-entry
Money Manager ExCross-platformGPLSingle portable SQLite file
SkroogeKDEGPLStrong visualizations
BuddiJavaGPLBeginner-simple

Chapter 5 · New Entrants — Lunch Money, Cushion, Fina, Origin

Apps that squeezed in between the incumbents.

Lunch Money — "Minimalism As Luxury"

  • Pricing: 100 USD per year (10 USD per month) — the lifetime option was retired in 2024
  • Indie one-person team (Jen Yip started as a side project; small team by 2025)
  • Plaid backend
  • Multi-currency (digital-nomad favorite)
  • Clean, minimalist UI
  • Public API + rule engine

Cushion — Bill Prediction + BNPL Tracker

  • Pricing: Free / Cushion Plus 5 USD per month
  • Core: upcoming-bill prediction + Buy Now Pay Later limit management
  • Integrates with Klarna, Affirm, Afterpay

Fina Money — Beauty as a Weapon

  • Pricing: 70 USD per year
  • New in 2023
  • Design-first — "the Notion of budgeting"
  • Plaid + rule engine + widgets

Origin — "Your Wealth Coach"

  • Pricing: 144 USD per year (12.99 USD per month)
  • AI advisor + human Certified Financial Planner pairing
  • Budget + investments + insurance + property + taxes, all in one
  • B2B (employers buy it as a benefit) + B2C

M1 Finance, Wealthfront, Betterment — Investment + Banking + Budget Bundles

These started as robo-advisors but now wrap banking, checking, and credit cards into one app.

  • M1 — Pie investing, 0 commission, credit card (Owners Rewards)
  • Wealthfront — Cash account at around 5 percent APY, 401(k) rollover
  • Betterment — Checking + Savings + Investing in one

Chapter 6 · Investment Tracking — Sharesight, Empower, Snowball, Stock Analysis

Budgeting apps own spending; these apps own the asset side.

Sharesight — Global Portfolio Tracker

  • Pricing: Free (10 holdings) / Investor 16 USD per month / Expert 33 USD per month
  • Australian-born, supports 40+ exchanges worldwide
  • Automatic dividend tracking and capital-gains tax reports are the core
  • Partial support for Korean and Japanese exchanges

Empower — US Net Worth + 401(k)

  • See Chapter 4
  • "Investment Checkup" visualizes how 401(k) fees eat your assets
  • "Retirement Planner" simulates retirement scenarios

Snowball Analytics — Built for Dividend Investors

  • Pricing: Free (3 portfolios) / Standard 8.99 USD per month / Premium 14.99 USD per month
  • Dividend calendar, dividend-growth analysis
  • Beloved by the DGI (Dividend Growth Investing) community

Stock Analysis (stockanalysis.com)

  • Pricing: Free / Pro 24.95 USD per month
  • US-equity and ETF fundamentals
  • Not a budget app, but pairs with portfolios

Chapter 7 · Bank-Aggregation APIs — Plaid, Yodlee, MX, TrueLayer, Tink

Behind every personal-finance app is the bank-connection infrastructure. When you tap "import my bank data," these companies are what actually move.

Plaid — North America and UK Standard

  • HQ San Francisco, founded 2013
  • 12,000+ institutions across North America, UK, Canada, parts of EU
  • The 2020 Visa acquisition attempt at 5.3 billion USD was blocked by the US DOJ on antitrust grounds
  • Independent valuation reached 13.4 billion USD in 2021
  • Clients: Venmo, Robinhood, Coinbase, Chime, Acorns, Monarch, Copilot, Lunch Money, and many others

Yodlee (Envestnet Subsidiary) — Veteran

  • Founded 1999, 17,000+ institutions
  • Mint depended on Yodlee until the end
  • Strong in wealth-management territory
  • Envestnet (a wealth-management giant) acquired it in 2015

MX — Plaid and Yodlee Alternative

  • Founded 2010, 16,000+ institutions
  • Strong data cleansing and categorization
  • Clients include Brigit, Stash, MoneyLion

Finicity (Mastercard Subsidiary)

  • Founded 2016, acquired by Mastercard in 2020 for 825 million USD
  • Strong in mortgage and lending data

TrueLayer — Europe's Open-Banking Leader

  • UK HQ, founded 2016
  • PSD2-based, 1,500+ banks across EU and UK
  • Variable Recurring Payments (VRP) — the next-generation payments rail in UK Open Banking
  • Clients include Revolut, Coinbase Europe

Tink (Visa Subsidiary) — Nordic-Started, Europe-Wide

  • Founded 2012 in Sweden
  • Acquired by Visa for 2.1 billion USD in 2022
  • 3,400+ European banks

Salt Edge, Bud, Codat

  • Salt Edge — global open banking (5,000+ banks across 100+ countries)
  • Bud — UK and US data intelligence
  • Codat — accounting-software integrations (QuickBooks, Xero) for SMB, not consumer

Chapter 8 · Korea — Toss, Banksalad, KakaoBank, Samsung Card

Korea has its own super-app ecosystem, so US-style budgeting apps barely penetrated.

Toss (Viva Republica)

  • Launched as a remittance app in 2015; by 2026 spans internet bank, securities, payments
  • Automatic ledger — every registered account and card aggregates automatically
  • Auto-categorization
  • Unified asset view (deposits, investments, real estate, vehicles)
  • Over 25 million users as of 2026
  • Built atop Korean Open Banking (Chapter 14)

Banksalad (Rainist)

  • Founded 2017
  • Holds MyData license (granted by Korea's Financial Services Commission)
  • Stronger analytics than Toss — spend patterns, category trends
  • Adds credit scores, insurance comparison, and real-estate lookup

KakaoBank Household Budget

  • A built-in feature inside the KakaoBank app
  • Auto categorization, monthly summaries
  • Pushes big-spend alerts through KakaoTalk

KakaoPay — Payments + Assets + Insurance

  • Bundles payments, transfers, investing, and insurance
  • Budget is secondary, but Kakao network effects keep users engaged

Samsung Card Money Plan

  • Free for Samsung Card members
  • Analyzes card usage patterns, billing reminders, savings suggestions

Bank-Native Ledgers

  • NH AllOneBank — Nonghyup (agricultural bank), strong in rural regions
  • Hana 1Q — Hana Bank unified app
  • Shinhan SOL, KB Star, Woori WON Banking — all ship native ledger modules

Korean users want one app for all finance — the super-app trend trumps the American single-purpose app model.


Chapter 9 · Japan — Zaim, Money Forward, Moneytree, LINE Household Budget

Japan has deep ledger (kakeibo) culture going back to housewives in the Meiji era. Digital ledgers have flourished here too.

Zaim — Number One in Market Share

  • Founded 2011, 11+ million users (as of 2025)
  • Free + Zaim Premium (480 yen per month)
  • Receipt OCR — photograph receipts and they auto-import (the best for Japanese supermarket and pharmacy slips)
  • 1,500+ banks and credit cards connected
  • Tax simulators (medical-expense deduction, furusato nozei)

Money Forward ME

  • Founded 2012, IPOed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in 2017
  • 14+ million users
  • Free + Premium (500 yen per month)
  • 2,600+ connectable institutions — the industry leader
  • Sister product Money Forward Cloud expanded into SMB accounting

Moneytree — Aggregator Strong on the B2B Side Too

  • Founded 2012 in Tokyo by American founder Paul Chapman
  • 2.5+ million B2C users plus licenses for over 70 financial institutions through Moneytree LINK (B2B)
  • Minimal UI, "no ads" stance

Oka Neneko

  • Founded 2012, part of the CyberAgent group
  • Beginner-friendly and lightweight
  • No signup or bank connection required (low-barrier entry)

LINE Household Budget

  • Launched 2018, integrated into the LINE messenger
  • Ties to LINE Pay and LINE Securities
  • Backed by 95 million Japanese LINE users

Other Japanese Apps

  • Dr. Wallet — OCR plus human review (manual-labor backed)
  • LetCom — built around family sharing
  • B/43 (be-yon-san) — ledger integrated with a payment account

A Japan-specific quirk: cash still has a sizable share, so the OCR / manual-entry ratio is higher than in the US or Korea.


Chapter 10 · Crypto / DeFi Tracking — Koinly, CoinTracker, DeBank, Zapper, Zerion

As crypto spread into the mainstream, a separate tracking and tax category grew.

Crypto-Tax Software

ToolPricingStrength
KoinlyFree (preview up to 10k tx) / 49 to 279 USDMulti-jurisdiction tax reports (US, UK, CA, AU, JP, KR, and over 20 others)
CoinTrackerFree / 59 to 199 USDStrong TurboTax integration
ZenLedgerFree / 49 to 399 USDStrong on DeFi and NFTs
TokenTax65 to 3,500 USDCPA option bundled
Crypto.com TaxFreeFree for Crypto.com users

Wallet Portfolio Trackers

  • DeBank — Ethereum + EVM-chain asset aggregation, deep into DeFi
  • Zapper — DeFi positions (LP, staking, governance tokens)
  • Zerion — multi-chain wallet plus trading
  • Rotki — open-source self-hosted (Python)
  • CoinGecko Portfolio — adds portfolio features to a price tracker

Crypto Tax in Korea and Japan

  • Korea: virtual-asset taxation set to start in January 2025 (2.5 million KRW deduction, then 22 percent)
  • Japan: classified as miscellaneous income, progressive up to 55 percent — Koinly and Cryptact offer Japan-format reports

Chapter 11 · Tax Software — TurboTax, FreeTaxUSA, Hometax, freee

A budget book eventually ends in a tax return.

United States

  • TurboTax (Intuit) — market leader, free to start plus 60 to 120 USD add-ons
  • H&R Block — retail offices plus online, often cheaper than TurboTax
  • FreeTaxUSA — federal free, state 14.99 USD
  • Cash App Taxes (formerly Credit Karma Tax) — fully free for simple cases
  • TaxSlayer, TaxAct — mid-tier pricing

Korea

  • Hometax (hometax.go.kr) — National Tax Service portal for income and VAT filing
  • 3o3 (Sam-jjeom-sam) — automated refund service for freelancers and gig workers
  • Semojangbu — accounting for sole proprietors
  • KakaoBank / Toss tax-refund applications — easy-refund add-ons

Japan

  • e-Tax (National Tax Agency) — government filing portal
  • freee Accounting — number-one cloud accounting for small business and sole proprietors
  • Money Forward Cloud Kakutei Shinkoku — Chapter 9's sister product
  • Yayoi (yayoi-kk.co.jp) — desktop-era veteran still going strong

Chapter 12 · AI in Personal Finance — Monarch AI, Copilot AI, Cleo, Origin

Once the LLM era arrived, personal finance got AI.

Monarch AI Assistant (launched November 2024)

  • Natural-language queries: "Did my restaurant spending rise the last three months?" returns a chart plus narrative
  • Suggests category cleanups
  • Backend: OpenAI plus a proprietary RAG layer

Copilot AI Insights

  • "Anomalies" detects unusual spend ("your restaurant spend is 2x your usual")
  • Cleans up merchant names (for example "SQ *COFFEE NYC" becomes "Joe's Coffee")

Cleo — A Chatbot Budget for Gen Z

  • Founded in 2016 in the UK, 6+ million users
  • Chatbot UI — manage spending through messenger-style chat
  • "Roast Mode" — an AI that mocks your spending (meme-marketing win)
  • Monetizes through credit-building and cash advances

Origin — Human + AI Advisor

  • See Chapter 5
  • AI drafts answers, a human CFP validates them

Maybe Finance — Open-Source AI Assistant

  • Maybe AI launched in 2025 (LangChain plus GPT-4)
  • Self-hosting users can also have an AI assistant

Chapter 13 · Privacy — Data Sharing, Scraping vs OAuth

The greatest vulnerability of a personal-finance app is trust. Every transaction you make is visible to one company.

Scraping vs OAuth (Open Banking)

Traditional scraping. You hand your bank password to the budget app; the app logs in on your behalf and scrapes the data. Security risk is high.

OAuth / Open Banking. You approve permissions on the bank's screen; the app only receives a token. The app never knows your password. Standardized APIs.

The US ran on scraping for years. The EU and UK forced OAuth via PSD2 (2018). Korea got Open Banking in 2019 and MyData scaling in 2022. Japan is moving more gradually.

Data Sharing and Affiliate Models

Mint and Credit Karma earned via credit-card, loan, and insurance referral fees off user data. Users used the product for free, unaware of the price tag on their information.

YNAB, Monarch, Copilot, and other paid services explicitly say "no ads, no data selling." The trade-off is plain: you pay directly.

Self-Hosting — The Path to Data Ownership

Actual, Firefly III, Maybe, and GnuCash keep data on your own server or disk. The trade-off: you also operate it.


Chapter 14 · Open Banking — EU, UK, US, Korea, Japan

Open banking is the rule that "with user consent, banks must expose data to third parties through a standard API."

EU — PSD2 (Effective 2018)

  • Payment Services Directive 2
  • Adopted 2015, effective 2018
  • Introduced AISP (Account Information Service Provider) and PISP (Payment Initiation Service Provider) licenses
  • SCA (Strong Customer Authentication) — mandatory two-factor
  • Effect: a European fintech explosion (Revolut, N26, Klarna, and so on)

UK — Open Banking (2018)

  • The Competition and Markets Authority required the Big 9 banks to expose standard APIs via the OBIE (Open Banking Implementation Entity)
  • The most mature open-banking ecosystem in the world
  • VRP (Variable Recurring Payments) — next-generation auto-pay
  • Estimated 10+ million users by 2026

US — 1033 (CFPB; proposed 2023, rule-making 2024, phased 2025)

  • Anchored in Section 1033 of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act
  • The CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) proposed in October 2023, issued the final rule in October 2024
  • Phased mandate by asset size (large banks by 2026, small ones by 2030)
  • Phased rollout from 2025
  • Big impact on incumbent scrapers like Plaid, MX, Yodlee

Korea — Open Banking (December 2019) + MyData (January 2022)

  • Open Banking — led by the Bank of Korea and KFTC, standardized APIs across 19 mainstream banks and every fintech
  • MyData — separately licensed by the FSC, unified credit-data lookup (Banksalad, Toss, KakaoPay, and 60+ institutions)
  • 60+ million users (1.2 per capita — many users hold multiple accounts)

Japan — Electronic Payment Intermediary Registration (2017)

  • Banking Act amendment laid the groundwork for API connections
  • Mandate is soft; banks remain largely voluntary
  • Money Forward and Zaim are the primary beneficiaries
  • A further amendment is under discussion in 2024

Chapter 15 · Pricing — 2026 Comparison Table

Annual pricing normalized to USD (from monthly billing where needed).

AppAnnual USDFree TierNote
Mint(shut down)-RIP 2024-03
Monarch997-day trialMint successor
Copilot95 (or 199 lifetime)14-day trialApple ecosystem
Simplifi3530-day trialMobile-first
YNAB10934-day + 1 year for studentsZero-based
Lunch Money10014-day trialIndie / minimal
Rocket MoneyUser-chosenFreeSub-cancel focus
PocketGuard60 (Plus)FreeOverspend prevention
Tiller7930-day trialSpreadsheet
Empower0 (advisory paid)FreeNet worth + investing
EveryDollar80 (Premium)Free (basic)Ramsey method
Goodbudget80 (Plus)Free (10 envelopes)Envelope
Origin14414-day trialAI + CFP
Cleo100 (Plus)FreeGen Z chatbot
Actual0 (self-host) / 48 (cloud)0OSS envelope
Firefly III00OSS PHP
Maybe0 (self-host)0OSS YC
Sharesight0 (10 holdings) / 192+FreeGlobal investing
Snowball0 (3 portfolios) / 108+FreeDividends
Zaim~38 (480 yen/mo)FreeJapan No. 1
Money Forward~40 (500 yen/mo)FreeMost connections (JP)
Toss0FreeKorea super-app
Banksalad0FreeKorea MyData

* USD conversions are approximate at May 2026 exchange rates.


Chapter 16 · Category Picker — Recommendations by User

"I need a Mint successor"

Monarch (design) or Copilot (Apple users)

"I'm clearing debt with a strict budget"

YNAB (zero-based, cult community) → or EveryDollar (Ramsey-method believer)

"I want investments + budgeting in one"

Empower (net worth, 401(k)) + Monarch (spending)

"Beginner / lightweight"

Simplifi (cheap, mobile-first) or Cleo (chatbot, Gen Z)

"Privacy / self-hosting"

Actual Budget (most beginner-friendly) or Firefly III (feature-rich)

"Spreadsheet die-hard"

Tiller (direct Google Sheets / Excel)

"Subscription-leak hunter"

Rocket Money (cancellation done for you)

"Living in Korea"

Toss (or Banksalad for analytics)

"Living in Japan"

Zaim (OCR) or Money Forward ME (most connections)

"Crypto holder"

Koinly (taxes) + DeBank (DeFi)

"Digital nomad / multi-currency"

Lunch Money (multi-currency) or Sharesight (global investing)

"Want that YC spirit, OSS freshness"

Maybe Finance


Chapter 17 · Migration — What Mint Refugees Reported

Approximate distribution of Mint users who migrated in 2024 to 2025 (extrapolated from Reddit r/MintMobile threads and app-side disclosures):

  • Monarch: ~30 percent
  • Credit Karma: ~25 percent (auto-migrated)
  • Rocket Money: ~10 percent
  • Copilot: ~8 percent
  • YNAB: ~7 percent
  • Simplifi: ~5 percent
  • Lunch Money: ~3 percent
  • Actual / self-hosted: ~3 percent
  • Other / undecided: ~9 percent

The migration truth. Mint's category, rule, and tag data had no portable standard, so anything beyond plain CSV had to be rebuilt by hand. Monarch's quick "Mint CSV import" was the single biggest reason it took the lead.


Chapter 18 · The Future — What's Coming After 2027

  1. Agentic financial assistants — "Plan next month's vacation fund" with the AI both transferring money and creating auto-save rules
  2. CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currencies) — digital yuan, digital euro, and so on — how do budget apps integrate them
  3. 1033 acceleration — scraping disappears in the US, OAuth standardizes, Plaid restructures its business
  4. 99 percent AI categorization — patterns over merchant, time, and amount land near-perfect classification
  5. Wealth-tracking and spend-tracking converge — net worth, spending, investments, and taxes in one app
  6. Privacy backlash — after Mint, users grow more skittish, fueling open-source and self-hosted growth
  7. Global super-apps — Toss and Money Forward models attempting US and European expansion

Epilogue — The Real Lesson After Mint

The one-sentence summary: "Free is expensive. Paid is honest. Open source is freedom — but the responsibility is yours."

Mint's 2024 death was not a tragedy but a market correction. The era of ad-funded budgeting ended; the era where users directly pay began. That cost runs about 80 to 150 USD per year, and in exchange your data does not become ad inventory.

The other lesson is methodology matters. The reason YNAB keeps its cult at the same price tier is a clear philosophy — zero-based budgeting. A pure tracker has a weak moat. A tool that changes behavior has a strong one.

Finally, the power of localization. Korea's Toss and Japan's Zaim / Money Forward grow not on global users but on local infrastructure (Open Banking, MyData, electronic-payment registrations). Even when global super-apps arrive, their seats stay reserved.

"Mint died, but budgeting did not. Users look at their own money. Whoever visualizes that money most honestly wins the next era — that's the 2026 competition."


Chapter 19 · A 30-Day Budgeting Starter Checklist

  1. Download the last three months of card and account statements
  2. List fixed costs (rent, subscriptions, insurance)
  3. Average out variable spending (dining, shopping, transport)
  4. Compute monthly take-home income (post-tax)
  5. Set a savings target (20 percent of income recommended)
  6. Set an emergency-fund target (3 to 6 months of living costs)
  7. List debts by interest rate
  8. Pick one budget app (use Chapter 16's guide)
  9. Connect banks and cards
  10. Customize categories (auto-categorization is 70 percent correct at best)
  11. Week one — review transactions 5 minutes a day
  12. Month one — try 50/30/20 (50 percent needs, 30 percent wants, 20 percent savings)
  13. Week two — add category rules
  14. Week three — draft next month's budget
  15. Week four — retrospective and adjust
  16. Decide on family sharing (Monarch and Goodbudget are strong here)
  17. Configure bill alerts
  18. Start tracking credit score (Credit Karma or Empower for free)
  19. Connect investment accounts too (unified asset view)
  20. Prep for tax season — export transactions
  21. Run savings challenges (No Spend Day, No Eat Out Week)
  22. Clean up subscriptions (Rocket Money in one go)
  23. Annual insurance review
  24. Annual retirement simulation (Empower)
  25. Pick a debt-payoff method (snowball or avalanche)
  26. Schedule a monthly "money date" with your partner / roommate
  27. A kids' allowance ledger (BusyKid, GoHenry)
  28. Backup emergency info (accounts, passwords, insurance)
  29. Will / POA — recommended from your 30s
  30. Last Sunday each month, 30-minute retrospective

Chapter 20 · References

  1. Mint shutdown announcement (Oct 2023)https://mint.intuit.com/blog
  2. Intuit Credit Karma migrationhttps://www.intuit.com/company/press-room/press-releases
  3. Monarch Moneyhttps://www.monarchmoney.com
  4. Copilot Moneyhttps://copilot.money
  5. Quicken Simplifihttps://www.quicken.com/products/simplifi
  6. YNABhttps://www.ynab.com
  7. Goodbudgethttps://goodbudget.com
  8. EveryDollar (Ramsey)https://www.ramseysolutions.com/ramseyplus/everydollar
  9. Empower (Personal Capital)https://www.empower.com
  10. Rocket Moneyhttps://www.rocketmoney.com
  11. PocketGuardhttps://pocketguard.com
  12. Tillerhttps://www.tillerhq.com
  13. Lunch Moneyhttps://lunchmoney.app
  14. Cushionhttps://cushion.ai
  15. Fina Moneyhttps://fina.money
  16. Originhttps://www.useorigin.com
  17. Cleo AIhttps://www.meetcleo.com
  18. Maybe Financehttps://maybefinance.com
  19. Actual Budgethttps://actualbudget.org
  20. Firefly IIIhttps://www.firefly-iii.org
  21. GnuCashhttps://www.gnucash.org
  22. HomeBankhttp://homebank.free.fr
  23. KMyMoneyhttps://kmymoney.org
  24. Money Manager Exhttps://moneymanagerex.org
  25. Plaidhttps://plaid.com
  26. Yodleehttps://www.yodlee.com
  27. MXhttps://www.mx.com
  28. Finicityhttps://www.finicity.com
  29. TrueLayerhttps://truelayer.com
  30. Tinkhttps://tink.com
  31. Salt Edgehttps://www.saltedge.com
  32. Codathttps://www.codat.io
  33. Sharesighthttps://www.sharesight.com
  34. Snowball Analyticshttps://snowball-analytics.com
  35. Stock Analysishttps://stockanalysis.com
  36. Koinlyhttps://koinly.io
  37. CoinTrackerhttps://www.cointracker.io
  38. ZenLedgerhttps://www.zenledger.io
  39. DeBankhttps://debank.com
  40. Zapperhttps://zapper.xyz
  41. Zerionhttps://zerion.io
  42. TurboTaxhttps://turbotax.intuit.com
  43. H&R Blockhttps://www.hrblock.com
  44. FreeTaxUSAhttps://www.freetaxusa.com
  45. Cash App Taxeshttps://cash.app/taxes
  46. Tosshttps://toss.im
  47. Banksaladhttps://banksalad.com
  48. KakaoBankhttps://www.kakaobank.com
  49. KakaoPayhttps://www.kakaopay.com
  50. National Tax Service Hometax (Korea)https://www.hometax.go.kr
  51. 3o3 (Korea)https://3o3.co.kr
  52. Zaim (Japan)https://zaim.net
  53. Money Forward MEhttps://moneyforward.com
  54. Moneytreehttps://getmoneytree.com
  55. LINE Household Budgethttps://linecorp.com
  56. e-Tax (NTA Japan)https://www.e-tax.nta.go.jp
  57. freeehttps://www.freee.co.jp
  58. CFPB 1033 rulehttps://www.consumerfinance.gov
  59. PSD2 (EU)https://finance.ec.europa.eu/regulation-and-supervision/financial-services-legislation/payment-services_en
  60. UK Open Bankinghttps://www.openbanking.org.uk
  61. Korean Open Banking (KFTC)https://www.openbanking.or.kr
  62. MyData (Korea FSC)https://www.fsc.go.kr
  63. CMA Open Banking (UK)https://www.gov.uk/cma

— Personal Finance & Budgeting Apps 2026, end.