Lately, I've been looking into personal finance apps, hoping to find something that could help me manage my finances and plan for the future. Despite there being so many apps designed to do this, I find myself continually reverting an Excel spreadsheet.
It seems like these apps should be making financial management easier, but in my experience—and from what I've gathered from doing a bit of research online (reddit and HN) others people find they often don't meet all our needs.
This has left me wondering, do they just not work?
Has anyone else here experienced similar frustrations? I'm curious to hear your experiences with finance apps (or do you just use a spreadsheet?) What specific features or issues have made you stick with or abandon these tools? Do you think these apps lack certain functionalities, or is it something else entirely?
I’d appreciate any insights or recommendations for alternatives that might be worth exploring.
Thanks in advance for sharing your thoughts!
Are there some quirks with the app? Sure. But it's very feature rich and does everything I need it to do.
At best, you can mostly get things into OFX files / quickbooks, or CSV / import into something else, but it's always a bit clunky, authentication is a pain, and every bank / provider does it a bit differently because... they don't actually want you to be able to do this yourself, they want you to log into their website and see their ads.
Alternatively, there are things like Mint, Plaid, but they don't stick around long enough, eventually get bought, and also are a channel for ads.
The ledger tool is pretty cool. In the past, I've gotten reasonably far with various tools & scripts to normalize bank file downloads into ledger format, and consolidate all of those into a set of accounts with some basic rules and occiasional hand tweaking.
You didn't mention any specific features or products or specific frustrations so its hard to provide any recommendations or insights or alternatives.